SpaceX's Falcon 9 grounded after failure dooms batch of Starlink
satellites
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[July 13, 2024]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -SpaceX's workhorse Falcon 9 rocket was grounded by
the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on Friday after one broke
apart in space and doomed its payload of Starlink satellites, the first
failure in more than seven years of a rocket relied upon by the global
space industry.
Roughly an hour after Falcon 9 lifted off from the Vandenberg Space
Force Base in California on Thursday night, the rocket's second stage
failed to reignite and deployed its 20 Starlink satellites on a shallow
orbital path where they will reenter Earth's atmosphere and burn up.
The attempt to reignite the engine "resulted in an engine RUD for
reasons currently unknown," SpaceX CEO Elon Musk wrote early on Friday
on his social media platform X, using initials for the industry term
Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly that usually means explosion.
The Falcon 9 will be grounded until SpaceX investigates the cause of the
failure, fixes the rocket and receives the FAA's approval, the agency
said in a statement. That process could take several weeks or months,
depending on the issue's complexity and SpaceX's plan to fix it.
The botched mission of the world's most active rocket ended a success
streak of more than 300 straight missions during which SpaceX has
maintained its dominance of the launch industry. Many countries and
space companies rely on privately owned SpaceX, valued at roughly $200
billion, to send their satellites and astronauts into space.
Musk said SpaceX was updating the software of the Starlink satellites to
force their on-board thrusters to fire harder than usual to avoid a
fiery atmospheric re-entry.
"Unlike a Star Trek episode, this will probably not work, but it's worth
a shot," Musk said.
The satellites pose no threat to the public, SpaceX wrote on Friday
evening on X. The company did not estimate when they would make their
reentry, which would appear as streaks of light across the sky.
"Shooting stars," Musk said, replying the SpaceX post.
Their altitude is so shallow that Earth's gravity is pulling them 3
miles (5 km) closer toward the atmosphere with each orbit, SpaceX said
earlier in the day, confirming they would "re-enter Earth's atmosphere
and fully demise."
NASA said in a statement on Friday it monitors all of SpaceX's Falcon 9
missions.
"SpaceX has been forthcoming with information and is including NASA in
the company's ongoing anomaly investigation to understand the issue and
path forward," a U.S. space agency spokesperson said.
SpaceX said the second stage's failure occurred after engineers detected
a leak of liquid oxygen, a propellant.
'INCREDIBLE RUN'
The mishap occurred on Falcon 9's 354th mission. It was the first Falcon
9 failure since 2016, when a rocket exploded on a launch pad in Florida
and destroyed its customer payload, an Israeli communications satellite.
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SpaceX's Falcon 9 is pictured launching satellites to orbit in space
after it lifted off from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in
California, U.S., in this screenshot obtained from a handout video
released on July 12, 2024. SpaceX/Handout via REUTERS
"We knew this incredible run had to come to an end at some point,"
Tom Mueller, SpaceX's former vice president of propulsion who
designed Falcon 9's engines, replied to Musk on X. "... The team
will fix the problem and start the cycle again."
The failure will likely stymie SpaceX's intensifying Falcon 9 launch
pace. The rocket's 96 launches last year were its most to date and
exceeded the annual launch total in any country. By comparison,
China, a space rival to the United States, launched 67 missions to
space in 2023 using various rockets.
"It is extremely rare for Falcon to fail. They have a much better
rate than almost any other rocket developed in terms of the success
of their mission," said Will Whitehorn, chair of the venture capital
firm Seraphim Space Investment Trust.
Although Thursday night's Falcon 9 flight was an in-house mission,
the rocket's grounding is likely to impact upcoming SpaceX customer
missions.
Falcon 9 is the only U.S. rocket capable of sending NASA crews to
the International Space Station. NASA was expecting to launch its
next astronaut mission in August, with SpaceX's Crew Dragon
astronaut capsule launching atop the rocket.
NASA has been trying to help fix unrelated problems with Boeing's
Starliner spacecraft, which is in the midst of a test mission to
prove it can become NASA's second astronaut ride to orbit alongside
Crew Dragon.
SpaceX was poised to launch as early as July 31 its Polaris Dawn
Crew Dragon mission sending four private astronauts into orbit for a
few days to conduct the first commercial spacewalk using the
company's newly designed spacesuits.
Jared Isaacman, head of the Polaris program and a mission crew
member, said he expects SpaceX to quickly recover from the failure.
"As for Polaris Dawn, we will fly whenever SpaceX is ready and with
complete confidence in the rocket, spaceship and operations,"
Isaacman wrote on X.
Musk replied that "we will investigate the issue and look for any
other potential near-misses."
SpaceX has launched about 7,000 Starlink satellites of various
designs into space since 2018 for its global broadband internet
network. Industry analysts have said the satellites on Thursday's
mission could be worth at least $10 million combined.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Additional reporting by Kanjyik Ghosh
and Akash Siram; Editing by Will Dunham, Barbara Lewis and David
Holmes)
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