
Michi Benthaus is about to make history.
Benthaus, an aerospace engineer at the European Space Agency, is one of the six passengers on Blue Origin‘s next space tourism launch, the company announced today (Dec. 3). She’ll become the first wheelchair user ever to reach the final frontier.
As its name suggests, NS-37 will be the 37th flight of Blue Origin’s reusable New Shepard rocket-capsule combo. Each of these suborbital jaunts lasts just 10 to 12 minutes from liftoff to capsule touchdown but gets above the 62-mile-high (100 kilometers) Kármán Line, the widely regarded boundary of outer space.
Blue Origin, which was founded by Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, has not disclosed how much it charges for this experience.
NS-37 will be the 16th crewed flight overall for the autonomous New Shepard, and its seventh such mission of 2025. To date, the vehicle has carried 86 people to and from suborbital space (but just 80 individuals, as six of them have been repeat customers).




