Billionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX has sought for years to send its
towering next-generation rocket system into orbit from the company's
private launch facilities in Texas, where it has only launched
prototypes of Starship's upper half some 6 miles (10 km) high to
demonstrate landing attempts.
The December mission will test the entire system for the first time,
involving the company's 230-foot (70-meter) Super Heavy booster to
lift the 160-foot (50-meter) Starship spacecraft into orbit.
"We track four major Starship flights. The first one here is coming
up in December, part of early December," Mark Kirasich, a senior
NASA official overseeing development of the agency's Artemis moon
program, said during a live-streamed NASA Advisory Council meeting.
The Super Heavy booster would return to land, while the orbital
Starship spacecraft would re-enter Earth's atmosphere roughly 90
minutes later to splashdown dozens of miles off a Hawaiian coast,
according to regulatory documents SpaceX filed last year.
Further ground tests with the rocket and regulatory reviews could
delay the debut orbital mission beyond December. The U.S. Federal
Aviation Administration, which oversees commercial launch site
safety, has not yet granted a license for the mission to SpaceX,
part of Musk's growing universe of companies that also includes
Tesla and Twitter.
The FAA would determine whether to grant SpaceX a license "only
after SpaceX provides all outstanding information and the agency can
fully analyze it", an FAA spokesman said Monday. SpaceX did not
return a request for comment.
Starship is poised to be SpaceX's flagship rocket system once fully
developed, succeeding the company's fleet of reusable Falcon 9
rockets as a more powerful and fully reusable ride to space for
large batches of commercial satellites, space tourists and
professional astronauts.
NASA in 2021 picked SpaceX's Starship to land humans on the moon
around 2025, for the first time since 1972. That mission, under a
roughly $3 billion contract, requires several spaceflight tests in
advance that could delay the 2025 moon landing mission.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Franklin Paul, Lisa Shumaker
and Alex Richardson)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|