Wednesday, November 20, 2024

SpaceX successfully launches giant Starship rocket but won’t catch it with mechanical arms – live

Must read

Liftoff: Starship launches from SpaceX’s launch pad

SpaceX has successfully launched the Starship on another test flight.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Starship splashes down in Indian Ocean

The Starship spacecraft has touched down in the Indian Ocean.

The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) last month granted SpaceX a long-awaited license for the launch of Starship’s fifth test launch in October. That same license covers today’s sixth test flight.

The FAA’s regulation of commercial rocket launches has been a source of frustration for Elon Musk, and he has complained that the agency impedes his company’s progress in getting to Mars.

As we reported earlier, Donald Trump has said that Musk will co-lead a newly created Department of Government Efficiency, a role that Musk said will allow him to rid the federal government of wasteful spending and regulations he has called burdensome.

Share

Updated at 

SpaceX says it has ignited a Raptor engine in space

SpaceX says that Starship has successfully ignited one of its Raptor engines while in space for the first time.

This is one of the four core objectives for today’s test flight, according to Elon Musk.

Share

Updated at 

SpaceX says that 30 minutes into Starship’s sixth flight test, “all systems continue to look nominal”.

Share

Updated at 

Starship demonstrated its catch-landing method for the first time during the fifth test mission last month.

Before Tuesday’s launch, Elon Musk had said the catch-landing was expected to be “faster/harder” on social media.

However SpaceX aborted the planned catch-landing, opting instead for a splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico.

Musk on Tuesday listed four core objectives for the test flight, including restarting Starship’s space-tailored engine during flight – key for its in-space maneuverability – and making a more visible ocean landing during the daytime, as past attempts have been at night.

Share

Updated at 

Starship continuing to coast in space

SpaceX’s Starship is currently in space and expected to return to Earth in less than 30 minutes.

As we reported earlier, the bottom half of Starship, the Super Heavy booster, was directed to a splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico.

SpaceX decided to pass up catching the booster with giant mechanical arms about four minutes into the test flight for unspecified reasons.

Not all of the criteria for a booster catch had been met, so the flight director did not command the booster to return to the launch site, SpaceX spokesperson Dan Huot said.

Share

Updated at 

Donald Trump has been pictured watching the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket from the control room in Brownsville, Texas.

The US president-elect was seen listening as SpaceX CEO Elon Musk explained the operations before the rocket launch.

Donald Trump in the control room before the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket. Photograph: Brandon Bell/AP
Trump listens as Elon Musk explains the operations. Photograph: Brandon Bell/AP
Musk and Trump in Brownsville, Texas. Photograph: Brandon Bell/AP
Share

Updated at 

Super Heavy booster splashes down in Gulf of Mexico

SpaceX says it will not attempt to catch and return the Super Heavy rocket booster.

The company achieved a significant milestone last month by catching the booster stage from its Starship rocket in a pair of robotic arms as it fell back to the company’s launchpad.

The historic feat drew praise from astronauts and space experts.

Share

Updated at 

SpaceX says the Super Heavy booster has shut down its 33 engines.

Liftoff: Starship launches from SpaceX’s launch pad

SpaceX has successfully launched the Starship on another test flight.

Share

Updated at 

Richard Luscombe

The SpaceX website has a comprehensive look at the 397ft Starship, which it says is the world’s first “fully reusable transportation system designed to carry both crew and cargo to Earth orbit, the Moon, Mars and beyond”.

The versatile spacecraft is designed to ultimately carry up to 100 people on long-duration interplanetary flights, deliver satellites into space, carry cargo for a moonbase and act as a tanker to refuel other space vehicles heading for the lunar surface or Mars.

Each of Starship’s previous five test flights have launched from SpaceX’s Starbase facility in Boca Chica Beach, Texas.

The company is developing launchpads at Cape Canaveral, Florida, for future operations, beginning possibly next year.

Share

Updated at 

Here are some pictures from the newswires of Elon Musk arriving at the site of the launch in Brownsville, Texas, with Donald Trump.

Elon Musk and Donald Trump before the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket, in Brownsville, Texas, today. Photograph: Brandon Bell/Reuters
Musk and Trump in Brownsville. Photograph: Brandon Bell/Reuters
Share

Updated at 

The weather is looking “fantastic” for the rocket launch, a SpaceX employee said.

“Light breeze, no clouds in the sky,” he said.

Beyond a return to the moon, Elon Musk is relying on Starship to be an integral part of his much more ambitious plan to get humans to Mars.

In September, the billionaire SpaceX founder revealed he was optimistic that the first astronauts could reach the red planet inside four years, and be living there in a self-sustaining city in 20.

Some observers say that’s an inconceivable timeline, while others see purpose in Musk’s assertions. Regular shuttle flights to Mars on Starship are absolutely achievable in the short to midterm future, they say.

Here’s our article looking at how, and when, Musk might actually achieve his dream of making humans an interplanetary species.

A banana has been placed inside the Starship flight, SpaceX says.

“Today’s Starship flight test has a special payload onboard – a banana!” Starlink writes.

“This universally-accepted measurement of scale is approximately the size of one Starlink Mini.”

Share

Updated at 

Latest article