Tuesday, June 11, 2024

S Starship Booster Ace Its Splashdown For First Time

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In The News:
SpaceX accomplishes first soft splashdown of Starship, Super Heavy Booster on Flight 4 mission – Spaceflight...

For a fourth time in a little more than a year, SpaceX launched a test mission of its massive Starship rocket from its development facility in southern Texas called Starbase. The launch, dubbed Flight 4, push the launch vehicle towards its goal of being a mostly reusable rocket.

Similarly to the previous three launches, Flight 4 did not include a payload and flew a suborbital trajectory. Unlike the preceding missions, Flight 4 saw a soft splashdown of the Super Heavy Booster (Booster 11) and of the Starship upper stage (Ship 29). Liftoff took place at 7:50 a.m. CDT (8:50 a.m. EDT, 1250 UTC), near the opening of a 120-minute window.

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Apparently, SpaceX had some well-placed cameras bobbing in the Gulf of Mexico to capture an unprecedented aspect of its Starship test last week.

Billionaire Elon Musk 's company recently released a video of its Super Heavy booster descending through the air during the rocket system's fourth uncrewed test flight on Thursday, June 6.

Over 25 seconds, the video shows the enormous booster flaring before softly splashing into the water. The video recorded the rushing and gurgling sounds of the water, disrupted by the ferocious blast of the booster's engines.

While it's not quite clear if all of the flames on that candlestick were where they ought to be, the company has labeled this the first successful water splashdown of its Starship booster, one of its main objectives for the test. Watch the video below in the post on X, the social platform also owned by Musk.

Recovering the heavy-lift booster, which stands about 233 feet tall, is part of SpaceX's goal of building a rapidly reusable Starship, much like its Falcon 9 rocket , which regularly carries loads of private customers' satellites into low-Earth orbit. The company has since guided its workhorse rocket's boosters down to drone ships in the ocean over 300 times.

Aerospace industry experts say landing the costly Starship boosters should lower the price of flight. In the commercial sector, SpaceX has led the way on booster reusability . Prior to its disruption of the space launch market, rocket components were typically discarded as one-and-done.

"When we start recovering Starship boosters, we'll want them to return to the launch site for a quicker turnaround," said Jessie Anderson, a SpaceX host during the live Thursday broadcast.

The Starship launch tower will have a dual purpose, also serving as a booster landing pad, Anderson said. After releasing Starship, the arms ⁘ or "chopsticks" ⁘ on the tower will help guide the booster into position for a precision landing.

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