Blue Origin's reusable booster lands successfully

Blue Origin
Blue Origin says a test of its 29-storey New Glenn rocket shows its booster ‌reuse capability. -AP

Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin says its New Glenn rocket booster has touched down ‌after its launch, marking its first landing of a reused booster.

The rocket lifted off on Sunday morning from Cape Canaveral, Florida, and the booster touchdown happened about 10 minutes later.

New Glenn carried AST SpaceMobile's BlueBird 7 satellite to low-earth orbit in a flight that marks a pivotal step for the company.

The mission was key to demonstrating that New Glenn, a 29-storey heavy-lift rocket, has ‌a reliable booster ‌reuse capability and ⁠can compete with Elon Musk's SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

The rocket's booster, ​dubbed "Never Tell Me the Odds," previously flew on the NG-2 mission in November and was recovered, setting up this week's milestone attempt.

The booster's name is a nod to a Han Solo line in the film Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back.

New Glenn is designed for the higher end of the commercial launch market with a seven-metre nose ​cone ​allowing it to carry bulkier payloads, including ​multiple satellites in a single mission.

AST SpaceMobile's BlueBird 7, ‌carried into orbit on NG-3, is the second satellite in its next-generation Block 2 constellation.

The satellite features what the company describes as the largest commercial communications array deployed in low-earth orbit.

Designed to connect directly with smartphones, the satellite is part of an effort to build a space-based mobile phone ​broadband network, similar to Amazon's Leo or SpaceX's Starlink.

AST SpaceMobile is targeting a constellation of ​45 to 60 such satellites ⁠by the end of 2026.