The blue source is preparing for launching the next tourism flight in space, and you can view the mission living here on Space.com.
The 32nd General Mission of the blue source New Shepard Suborbital Vehicle, known as NS-32, is set to rise today (May 31) from launching company in West Texas. The mission marks the 12th person’s flight for the new Shepard program.
Blue source The purpose for an opening window opened at 9:30 am EDT (1330 GMT) on Saturday. A livestream of new shepard launch can be used in blue source website 30 minutes before the alsaff, and it will be simulcast the YouTube and blue source X Account. Broadcast will also be enabled at the top of this page as well as the Luna.com Homepage and YouTube Channel. The webcast will include comments, mission updates and information about crew staff flying on NS-32.
the NS-32 crew Includes entrepreneurs, professionals and scientific teachers. Among them is aymette medina jorge, based in the US Stem intermediate;; Gretchen Great, a radiologist and the happy space of space; And Jaime Alemán, an ambassador to the US and the lifetime of the observer, who visited all 193 unknown countries.
The flying mission is also Jesse Williams, a businessman and mountaineer, gathering six of the highest peaks of the earth, including Mt. Everyd; Mark Mark Rocket, a businessman aerospace set to be the first New Zealander to reach space; Paul Jeris, an entrepreneur, avid traveling and attractive space of the whole life, encouraged by his father in the engineer.
NS-32 will bring six passengers to an almost 11-minute journey to bring them past the Coat – International recognized border of space, with 62 miles (100 kilometers) above the ground. The capsule is separated from the rocket booster soon after the rise of several minutes of microgreguvity before descending on the desert floor under the parachutes in Texas.
During the brief mission, the NS-32 crew will experience a few minutes of weightlessness, allowing them to float freely inside the capsule and observe earth from space. Through many panoramic windows in the capsule, the crew can see the curvature on the planet and the more opposite between bright blue atmosphere and the black space.
Many astronauts describe it as the “Excessive effect“- a deep transfer of sight that arouses a deep sense of land connection and in vulnerability around it.