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Elon Musk just released the first devastating footage of Sunday's rocket landing attempt

Jan 18, 2016, 03:28 IST

On Sunday, SpaceX tried and was unsuccessful at landing the first stage of its second-stage rocket on a drone ship floating in the Pacific. SpaceX had planned to broadcast the landing attempt live, but just seconds before touchdown was expected, the camera froze.

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Now, SpaceX founder and owner Elon Musk just released the first footage of the wreckage, while staying optimistic:

Indeed, like Musk said, the residual pieces of the crash are bigger this time compared to the first two similar landing attempts last year, which ended in a giant explosion and lots of small rocket pieces scattered across the ship's deck and nearby seafloor.

From the looks of it, a good chunk of the rocket survived. The problem with the landing was a technical issue concerning one of the landing legs.

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After successfully boosting the second stage and its cargo off the planet earlier Sunday afternoon, the first stage Falcon 9 booster turned itself around for re-entry, performing a series of engine burns and autonomous navigation calculations to slow down and get to the drone ship's landing platform.

It sounds like everything was working well - the engine burns, the descent, and the navigation - up until the rocket landed on the platform. One of the legs didn't lock into place. Without all four legs working, the 14-story-tall rocket wasn't stable, and after touch down, it tipped over.

If the leg had locked as it was supposed to, the landing might have been a success. As Musk said, however, this won't be the last drone ship landing attempt we'll see. This was the third time SpaceX attempted to land one of its rockets on a drone ship, and each time the company keeps getting one step closer.

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