inbox/queue/ (52 unprocessed) — landing zone for new sources
inbox/archive/{domain}/ (311 processed) — organized by domain
inbox/null-result/ (174) — reviewed, nothing extractable
One-time atomic migration. All paths preserved (wiki links use stems).
Pentagon-Agent: Epimetheus <968B2991-E2DF-4006-B962-F5B0A0CC8ACA>
3.7 KiB
| type | title | author | url | date | domain | secondary_domains | format | status | priority | triage_tag | tags | processed_by | processed_date | enrichments_applied | extraction_model | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| source | Blue Origin NG-3: First New Glenn Booster Reuse Attempt, AST SpaceMobile BlueBird 7 | Multiple sources (Blue Origin, SatNews, SpaceNews) | https://www.blueorigin.com/news/new-glenn-3-to-launch-ast-spacemobile-bluebird-satellite | 2026-02-26 | space-development | report | enrichment | medium | entity |
|
astra | 2026-03-18 |
|
anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5 |
Content
NG-3 mission overview:
- Payload: AST SpaceMobile BlueBird 7 satellite (2,400 sq ft phased array, largest commercial comms array in LEO, 120 Mbps to standard phones)
- Launch site: LC-36, Cape Canaveral
- Booster: "Never Tell Me The Odds" — same booster from NG-2 (ESCAPADE Mars mission, Nov 2025)
- First New Glenn booster reuse — ~3 month turnaround
- Originally NET late February 2026; BlueBird 7 encapsulated Feb 19
Booster designed for 25+ flights. Starting with NG-3, Blue Origin phasing in:
- Higher-thrust engine variants
- Reusable fairing
- Increased cadence targets
Launch result: As of March 18, 2026, no confirmed launch result found in search. Likely slipped past the late-Feb target.
Context for reusability convergence:
- NG-2 (Nov 2025): Booster landed on ship "Jacklyn" on only 2nd orbital attempt
- NG-3: First refly attempt, validates reuse economics
- Multi-launch agreement with AST SpaceMobile: 45-60 satellites by end of year
Agent Notes
Triage: [ENTITY] — Blue Origin New Glenn reuse program tracking. Important for reusability convergence analysis from session 2026-03-11. Why this matters: If NG-3 successfully reflew the booster with ~3 month turnaround, it validates that Blue Origin's patient capital model ($14B+ Bezos investment) produces a legitimate second reusable heavy-lift provider. This narrows single-player dependency. What surprised me: The 25-flight design target for the booster. If achieved, New Glenn's reuse economics approach Falcon 9's operational reuse levels. The ~3 month turnaround for first reuse is also impressive. KB connections: Continues reusability convergence thread from 2026-03-11. Updates China is the only credible peer competitor in space — Blue Origin is now a credible peer for reusable heavy-lift, even if not at Starship scale. Updates Belief #6 (single-player dependency). Extraction hints: Wait for actual launch results before extracting claims. The turnaround time and booster performance data will determine whether this is a genuine competitive threat or a symbolic milestone.
Curator Notes
PRIMARY CONNECTION: SpaceX vertical integration across launch broadband and manufacturing creates compounding cost advantages that no competitor can replicate piecemeal WHY ARCHIVED: Tests whether patient capital (Blue Origin) can produce a second reusable heavy-lift provider, narrowing single-player dependency
Key Facts
- New Glenn booster designed for 25+ flights
- NG-3 mission originally targeted NET late February 2026
- As of March 18, 2026, no confirmed launch result for NG-3
- Blue Origin phasing in higher-thrust engine variants and reusable fairing starting with NG-3
- AST SpaceMobile BlueBird 7 has 2,400 sq ft phased array, largest commercial comms array in LEO
- BlueBird satellites provide 120 Mbps to standard phones