The blue source sent 70th person in space today (June 29) on the 13th flight of rocket to bring passengers.
The company New Shepard Suborbital vehicle launches Saturday at 9:39 AM CDT (10:39 AM EDT or 1439 GMT) from launching Sundays Texas. On board is husband and wife Allie and Carl Kuehner, Land Larson, Freddie Rescigno, Jr., Owolabi Salis and James Sitkin.
Carl Kuehner has become a blue astronaut of the astronaut 70, based on the beginning, determined by the chair riding the new shepard capsule he assigned to fly. He also became 750 people in history to reach space, as recorded at the Association of Space Explorers’ Registry of Space Traverser.
The 10-minute NS -3 mission – numbered like 33rd New Year Sigeling Flight on SPERTS, which is trading the Crew Kármán, “RSS Káchole-Cushs-Cushing Touchdown is not far from their launch.
For about three minutes as the mumdrop capsule reaches its apople, or highest point from the ground, the Kueherson, Larson, rescigno and sitkin experienced Severe And saw the curve on the planet set against the steep darkness of space.
Flight reaches a 345,044 feet (105.2 km) above the ground, greater than CoatThe international acceptable border between the earth and space of 62 miles long (100 kilometers).
Flying with crew more than 1,000 physical and digital postcards Designed by students and the public, as collected at the Museum of Seattle and Parkcrest Elementary in Burumbia, British Columbia, Canada. The cards are about an ongoing project through the Blue Origrance Organization Club Club for the future.
Like all the new Shepard fights, the cost per NS-33 seat is not exposed. Passengers include an environmentalist, chairman of a real estate development company, the former CEO of a public transportation company, an electrical wire and cing distributor, and two lawyers.
Six NS-33 passengers call themselves “Solstice 33,” as they were initially scheduled to launch Summer Solsterce (June 21) but delayed in bad weather conditions. Their flight brings the total number of people flying on subsonal journals in 123, according to the association of explorers in space.