SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket soars in
debut test launch from Florida
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[February 07, 2018]
By Joey Roulette
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - The
world's most powerful rocket, SpaceX's Falcon Heavy, roared into space
through clear blue skies on its debut test flight on Tuesday from a
Florida launch site in another milestone for billionaire entrepreneur
Elon Musk's private rocket service.
The 23-story-tall jumbo rocket, carrying a cherry red Tesla Roadster
from the assembly line of Musk's electric car company as a mock payload,
thundered off its launchpad in billowing clouds of steam and rocket
exhaust at 3:45 p.m (2045 GMT) from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape
Canaveral, where moon missions once began.
Boisterous cheering could be heard from SpaceX workers at the company's
headquarters in Hawthorne, California, where a livestream feed of the
event originated. At least 2,000 spectators cheered the blastoff from a
campground near Cocoa Beach, 5 miles (8 km) from the space center.
Within three minutes, the Falcon Heavy's two side boosters separated
from the central rocket in one of the most critical points of the
flight.
Then, capitalizing on cost-cutting reusable rocket technology pioneered
by SpaceX, the two boosters flew themselves back to Earth for safe
simultaneous touchdowns on twin landing pads at Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station, about eight minutes after launch. Each rocket unleashed a
double sonic boom as it neared the landing zone.
The center booster rocket, which SpaceX had predicted was less likely to
be salvaged, slammed into the Atlantic at about 300 miles per hour (483
kph), showering the deck of the nearby drone landing vessel and
destroying two of the ship's thrusters, Musk told a post-launch news
conference.
'CRAZY THINGS COME TRUE'
Still, the Silicon Valley mogul known for self-deprecating
understatement hailed the launch as a victory and "a big relief."
"I had this image of this giant explosion on the pad, with wheels
bouncing down the road and the logo landing somewhere with a thud. But
fortunately, that's not what happened," he said. "Crazy things come
true."
While the Falcon Heavy's initial performance appeared, by all accounts,
to have been near flawless, it remained to be seen whether the upper
stage of the vehicle and its payload would survive a six-hour "cruise"
phase to high Earth orbit through the planet's radiation belts.
The launch, so powerful that it shook the walls of the press trailer at
the complex, was conducted from the same site used by NASA's towering
Saturn 5 rockets to carry Apollo missions to the moon more than 40 years
ago. SpaceX has said it aspires to send missions to Mars in the coming
years.
The successful liftoff was a key turning point for Musk's privately
owned Space Exploration Technologies, which stands to gain a new edge
over the handful of rivals vying for lucrative contracts with NASA,
satellite companies and the U.S. military.
Falcon Heavy is designed to place up to 70 tons into standard low-Earth
orbit at a cost of $90 million per launch. That is twice the lift
capacity of the biggest existing rocket in America's space fleet - the
Delta 4 Heavy of rival United Launch Alliance (ULA), a partnership of
Lockheed Martin Corp <LMT.N> and Boeing Co <BA.N> - for about a fourth
the cost.
The demonstration flight put the Heavy into the annals of spaceflight as
the world's most powerful rocket in operation, with more lift capacity
than any space vehicle to fly since NASA's Saturn 5, which was retired
in 1973, or the Soviet-era Energia, which flew its last mission in 1988.
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A SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket lifts off from historic launch pad 39-A
at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S.,
February 6, 2018. REUTERS/Thom Baur
Propelled by 27 rocket engines, the Heavy packs more than 5 million
pounds of thrust at launch, roughly three times the force of the
Falcon 9 booster rocket that until now has been the workhorse of the
SpaceX fleet. The new rocket is essentially constructed from three
Falcon 9s bolted together side by side.
'NEW SPACE RACE?'
Going along for the ride in a bit of playful cross-promotional space
theater was the sleek red, electric-powered sports car from Musk's
other transportation enterprise, Tesla Inc <TSLA.O>.
Adding to the whimsy, SpaceX planted a space-suited mannequin in the
driver's seat of the convertible Tesla Roadster.
Musk mused that "it may be discovered by some future alien race."
The white spacesuit was real, he said.
A third burn was successful, Musk Tweeted late on Tuesday, sending
the Tesla Roadster into its planned trajectory.
"Exceeded Mars orbit and kept going to the Asteroid Belt," he
tweeted.
The roadster, which carries a plaque inscribed with the names of
more than 6,000 SpaceX employees, could instead end up in perpetual
Earth orbit.
The launch followed an impressive run of successful paid missions -
20 in all since January 2017, when SpaceX returned to flight
following a 2016 launchpad accident that destroyed a $62 million
rocket and a $200 million Israeli communications satellite that it
was to put into orbit two days later.
Musk said he hoped Tuesday's achievement would encourage a new
"space race" by private ventures and other countries, an allusion to
the 1960s Cold War contest between the United States and the Soviet
Union.
"Space races are exciting," he said.
SpaceX had previously announced plans to eventually use Falcon Heavy
to launch two paying space tourists on a trip around the moon. Musk
said on Monday he was now inclined to reserve that mission for an
even more powerful SpaceX launch system, the Big Falcon Rocket, or
BFR, whose development he said was proceeding more swiftly than
expected.
(Additional reporting by Irene Klotz at Cape Canaveral, Fla. and
Gregg Newton in Cocoa Beach, Fla.; Writing and additional reporting
by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Will Dunham and Peter
Cooney)
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