Blue Origin is preparing for a New Glenn launch this evening. The mission includes a planned recovery of the first-stage booster, a critical step in the rocket’s reusable flight architecture.
If the schedule holds, New Glenn’s methane-oxygen first stage will conduct a powered return after stage separation, culminating in a controlled landing and attempted post-flight recovery.
Blue Origin says the booster is designed for multiple reuses, with engine and structure inspections planned between flights.
After launch, the first stage will re-enter at high dynamic pressure, reignite for deceleration, and perform a final landing burn. If successful, the recovered booster will undergo detailed analysis to confirm thermal margins, guidance precision, and hardware condition after ascent and descent.
As of this afternoon, the target is still 19:45 UTC — with real-time adjustments possible inside the final hour of the countdown.
UPDATE #1
