SpaceX
launches communications satellite but botches sea landing
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[March 05, 2016]
By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - A SpaceX
Falcon 9 rocket blasted off from Florida and thrust a communications
satellite into orbit on Friday, but the launch vehicle's reusable
main-stage booster was destroyed when it failed to land itself on an
ocean platform, the company said.
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It marked the fourth botched at-sea return landing attempt for
Elon Musk's privately owned Space Exploration Technologies, though a
Falcon main-stage rocket did achieve a successful ground-based
touchdown after soaring back to Earth from a less demanding launch
in December.
The latest try occurred after four SpaceX launch delays stretching
back to Feb. 24.
On Friday, the 23-story-tall Falcon 9 bolted off its seaside launch
pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station as scheduled at 6:35 p.m.
EST/2335 GMT. A half-hour later it completed the chief goal of its
mission, putting the Boeing-built satellite, owned by
Luxembourg-based SES SA, into orbit more than 25,000 miles (40,600
km) above Earth.
On its way up, the rocket’s first-stage booster separated as
planned, turned around and headed toward a platform floating about
400 miles (645 km) off Florida’s east coast. The rocket found its
target, but its velocity proved too great to allow for a safe
landing on the drone barge.
“Rocket landed hard,” Musk, the founder and chief executive officer
of SpaceX, said in a Twitter message more than an hour after
blastoff. “Didn’t expect this one to work ... but next flight has a
good chance.”
The ability to safely and reliably return the rocket's main stage to
a landing pad at sea has been a key hurdle in Musk's quest to
develop a relatively cheap, reusable launch vehicle.
The rocket flying on Friday faced a particularly challenging mission
to deliver the 12,613-pound (5,721 kg) satellite into an orbit more
than 100 times higher than where the International Space Station
flies.
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The speed required to achieve that feat meant the rocket was going
too fast to even attempt a ground landing.
SpaceX came close to nailing an ocean touchdown in January after
blasting off from California to deliver a climate-monitoring
satellite into orbit. The returning main-stage rocket settled itself
on a platform in the Pacific Ocean, but a stabilizing landing leg
failed to latch, causing the booster to keel over and explode.
SpaceX’s next mission, a cargo-delivery run to the space station for
NASA, is targeted for launch in late March or early April.
The launch firm has contracts worth more than $10 billion from
commercial companies, NASA and other agencies.
(Reporting by Irene Klotz from Cape Canveral; Editing by Steve
Gorman, Chris Reese, Richard Chang and Leslie Adler)
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