NASA carries out its first-ever rocket launch outside of US

The launch from a commercial site in Australia is hailed as the start of a 'new era' for the Australian space industry by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

Equatorial Launch Australia CEO Michael Jones, whose company owns and operates the launch site, says the chance to work with NASA is a milestone for commercial space firms in the country.

Equatorial Launch Australia CEO Michael Jones, whose company owns and operates the launch site, says the chance to work with NASA is a milestone for commercial space firms in the country.

NASA's first-ever launch from a commercial site outside of the United States has blasted off from Australia's Outback in a "historic" moment for the country's space industry.

In the first of three planned launches from the Arnhem Space Centre, the rocket, carrying technology likened to a "mini Hubble" telescope, lifted off - blasted about 350 kilometres (218 miles) into the night sky late on Sunday.

"It is a momentous occasion for us as a company in particular, but it's historic for Australia," Equatorial Launch Australia CEO Michael Jones said ahead of the lift-off.

Jones, whose company owns and operates the launch site in the far north of Australia, described it as a "coming out" party for the country's space industry and said the chance to work with NASA was a milestone for commercial space firms in the country.

After a series of rain and wind delays, the suborbital sounding rocket soared into the sky to study x-rays emanating from the Alpha Centauri A and B systems.

After reaching its apogee, the rocket's payload was to capture data on the star systems before parachuting back to earth.

READ MORE: SpaceX launch marks a new era in the privatisation of space

Fresh possibilities for scientists

According to NASA, the launch offers a unique glimpse of the distant systems and unlocked fresh possibilities for scientists.

"We're excited to be able to launch important science missions from the Southern Hemisphere and see targets that we can't from the United States," Nicky Fox, NASA's Heliophysics Division director in Washington, said on announcing the mission.

Jones said the unique location had made preparations hard, with years of work to get regulatory approval and the need to haul rockets on barges to the launch site - about 28 hours drive from Darwin in northern Australia.

"I think for the team, it's gonna be, you know, a huge relief that it's done," he said.

But with the next launch already looming on July 4, the break would be short-lived.

"We need to, you know, dust ourselves off, take a day off and then get back into it in readiness for the next launch because it's just as important."

It is the first NASA rocket to launch from Australia since 1995, and the project was hailed as the start of a "new era" for the country's space industry by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

READ MORE: Blue Origin to launch its first space tourism trip in July

Route 6