Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has revealed who will fly on its next space tourism mission.
That six-passenger suborbital flight will lift off from the company’s West Texas launch site, on a date that hasn’t been announced yet.
The upcoming mission is known as NS-33, because it will be the 33rd overall launch of Blue Origin‘s reusable, autonomous New Shepard vehicle. It will be the company’s 13th human spaceflight mission.
Here’s a brief rundown of the six NS-33 passengers, using information provided by Blue Origin.
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New Shepard flights last 10 to 12 minutes from liftoff to the touchdown of the vehicle’s crew capsule. (New Shepard’s first-stage booster also comes back to Earth for a safe landing and eventual reuse).
During this brief time, New Shepard passengers get to experience a few minutes of weightlessness and see the curve of Earth against the blackness of space.
Blue Origin’s first crewed mission was in July 2021, a flight that included Bezos and his brother Mark. NS-33 will be the company’s fourth human spaceflight of 2025.