SpaceX test-fires Starship booster in milestone for debut orbital launch
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[February 10, 2023]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -SpaceX's towering Super Heavy booster, one half of
the company's Starship rocket system, briefly roared to life for the
first time on Thursday in a test-firing that puts the behemoth moon and
Mars vehicle closer to its first orbital flight in the coming months.
Thirty-one of the Super Heavy's 33 Raptor rocket engines fired for
roughly 10 seconds at SpaceX's facilities in Boca Chica, Texas, the
company's chief executive, Elon Musk, tweeted shortly after the test,
shown during a livestream.
"Team turned off 1 engine just before start & 1 stopped itself, so 31
engines fired overall," Musk tweeted. "But still enough engines to reach
orbit!"
The engines were ignited in a roar of orange flames and billowing clouds
of vapor while the 23-story-tall rocket remained bolted in place
vertically atop a platform adjacent to a launch tower.
When mated to its upper-stage Starship spacecraft, the entire vehicle
will stand taller than the Statue of Liberty at 394 feet (120 meters)
high, forming the centerpiece of Musk's ambitions to eventually colonize
Mars. But plans call for it to first play a leading role in NASA's
renewed human exploration of the moon.
It was unclear whether SpaceX will decide to conduct another static-fire
test of the Super Heavy, with all 33 engines, before the company
attempts to launch the powerful, next-generation rocket for the first
time in an uncrewed flight to space.
That launch, a test mission lifting off from Texas and landing off the
coast of Hawaii, could happen "in the next month or so," SpaceX
President Gwynne Shotwell told a conference on Wednesday, though the
exact flight date hinged on the outcome of Thursday's static fire test.
"Keep in mind, this first one is really a test flight," Shotwell said.
"The real goal is to not blow up the launch pad, that is success."
A previous test firing of a Super Heavy booster in July of 2022 ended
with the vehicle's engine section exploding in flames. Before that,
SpaceX had test-launched Starship's top half in several "hop" flights to
an altitude of roughly 6 miles to demonstrate that rocket's landing
abilities. All but one crashed.
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Starship prototypes are pictured at the
SpaceX South Texas launch site in Brownsville, Texas, U.S., May 22,
2022. Picture taken May 22, 2022. REUTERS/Veronica G. Cardenas
Thursday's test-firing of the 31 Raptor engines appeared to set a
new record for the most thrust ever produced by a single rocket -
roughly 17 million pounds compared with 10.5 million pounds for the
Russian N1, and 8 million pounds for NASA's Space Launch System (SLS)
rocket, livestream commentators for the space media group NASA
Spaceflight said. They said it also marked the most rocket engines
ever fired simultaneously, exceeding the 30 engines of the N1.
Moreover, Super Heavy's 33 engines will far surpass the thrust from
the first stage of the Saturn V, the storied NASA rocket that sent
humans to the moon during the Apollo program of the 1960s and '70s.
Starship's development is funded partially by a $3 billion contract
from NASA, which plans to use the SpaceX rocket in the next several
years to land the first crew of astronauts on the moon since 1972,
as part of the U.S. space agency's multibillion-dollar Artemis
program.
On Wednesday, NASA engineers in Mississippi test-fired a redesigned
version of the agency's own rocket engines, the Aerojet Rocketdyne-built
RS-25, which will power the SLS on future flights.
SLS and Starship are the two spacecraft currently at the forefront
of the Artemis program, which NASA said is aimed at establishing a
permanent base on the moon as a stepping stone to human exploration
of Mars.
(Reporting and writing by Joey Roulette in Washington; Additional
reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Jonathan Oatis
and Christopher Cushing)
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