SpaceX's Starship survives return to Earth, aces landing test on fourth
try
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[June 07, 2024]
By Joey Roulette
(Reuters) -SpaceX's Starship rocket survived a fiery, hypersonic return
from space and achieved a breakthrough landing demonstration in the
Indian Ocean on Thursday, completing a full test mission around the
globe on the rocket's fourth try.
Starship's controlled fall into the Indian Ocean just 65 minutes after
launching from Texas capped the latest advance in the company's
test-to-failure rocket development campaign, a multibillion-dollar
effort by Elon Musk's space company to build a reusable satellite
launcher and moon lander.
The three previous test missions ended with Starship blowing up or
disintegrating. Testing has a ways to go. Musk has said SpaceX is
planning at least six Starship test flights this year, with more
expected in the years ahead as it faces pressure from NASA to
demonstrate it can safely put astronaut crews on the lunar surface.
The two-stage, rocket system, which stands nearly 400 feet (120-meter)
tall, consists of the Starship vessel mounted atop its towering Super
Heavy rocket booster. At 7:50 a.m. CDT (1250 GMT), it blasted off from
SpaceX's Starbase launch site near Boca Chica Village in South Texas,
sending powerful shockwaves rippling through the Gulf Coast's morning
fog.
Super Heavy detached from the Starship upper stage at an altitude of 74
km (46 miles), as Starship ignited its own engines to ascend further
toward space. Meanwhile, Super Heavy returned to the Gulf of Mexico and
executed a soft splashdown, demonstrating a touchdown that would
otherwise be on land.
In space, a SpaceX livestream showed Starship, outfitted with onboard
cameras, coasting around 16,000 miles (25,750 km) per hour at an
altitude of roughly 200 km (125 miles) as it made its way toward the
Indian Ocean for a return to Earth, setting up for a key demonstration
of its reusable design.
The rocket's first launch in April 2023 exploded minutes after liftoff
some 25 miles (40 km) above ground, while its second attempt in November
blew up after reaching space. The rocket's third test flight in March
made it much farther but broke apart during atmospheric reentry some 64
km (40 miles) over the Indian Ocean.
On Thursday, Starship appeared to have overcome those past technical
challenges. Beginning at about 45 minutes into flight, onboard cameras
showed a field of superhot plasma forming around Starship's exterior -
marking with hues of orange, red, bluish purple, and green the start of
the spaceship's blazing hot plunge through Earth's atmosphere.
As Starship's descent was slowed by violent atmospheric friction, bits
of metal and its hexagonal heat-shield tiles began flying off and parts
of the rocket's steering flaps were stripped to a skeleton, though they
remained functional.
Starship reignited an engine to flip itself upright in mid-descent, as
it would for a landing on ground or on the moon, then splashed into the
Indian Ocean, as confirmed by waves of water seen through an onboard
camera's broken, debris-covered lens.
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SpaceX's Starship launches its fourth flight test from the company's
Boca Chica launchpad, designed to eventually send astronauts to the
moon and beyond, near Brownsville, Texas, U.S. , in this handout
picture obtained on June 6, 2024. SpaceX/Handout via REUTERS
'STARSHIP MADE IT ALL THE WAY'
"Despite loss of many tiles and a damaged flap, Starship made it all
the way to a soft landing in the ocean!" SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, who
had said Starship's reentry was the mission's biggest goal, posted
on social media after the splashdown.
The rocket was partly covered with hundreds of small black tiles
designed to protect against the extreme heat encountered while
diving through Earth's atmosphere at hypersonic speeds.
Meant to be cheaper and more powerful than SpaceX's workhorse Falcon
9 rocket, Starship's totally reusable design represents the future
of the company's dominant satellite launch and astronaut business.
It is due to be used by NASA in the next few years to land the first
astronauts on the moon since 1972.
Much is riding on SpaceX's development of Starship, relied upon by
NASA as it aims to return astronauts to the moon in 2026 in a
rivalry with China, which plans to send its astronauts there by
2030. China has made several recent advances in its lunar program,
including a second landing on the moon's far side in a sample
retrieval mission.
Despite Starship's development appearing quicker than other rocket
programs, it has been slower than Musk originally envisioned. A
Japanese billionaire who in 2018 paid to fly Starship around the
moon, at the time expected to occur last year, canceled his flight
last week, citing schedule uncertainties.
Musk's drive to rapidly build Starship has endangered SpaceX workers
in Texas and California, a Reuters investigation found.
Musk, who founded SpaceX in 2002, has said Starship must launch
hundreds of times before it carries humans, suggesting it could be
years before the rocket flies crews or lands astronauts on the lunar
surface.
SpaceX routinely flies astronauts to and from the International
Space Station in low-Earth orbit for NASA using its Crew Dragon
capsule, which launches atop the company's Falcon 9 rocket. No
private company has ever sent humans to the moon.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Washington; Editing by Will Dunham
and Jonathan Oatis)
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