+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

Starship lands in the ocean with its engines firing for the first time, bringing Elon Musk one step closer to Mars

Jun 7, 2024, 00:15 IST
Business Insider
Starship launches from Boca Chica, Texas on its fourth test flight toward space.SpaceX
  • SpaceX's Starship rocket completed its first full flight and ocean splashdown.
  • Surviving the ultrahot, high-stress plummet through Earth's atmosphere is a huge milestone.
Advertisement

SpaceX's ambitious mega-rocket, Starship, just proved that it can not only fly into space but also survive the extreme plummet back to Earth mostly intact.

On Thursday, both stages of the rocket — the Super Heavy booster and the Starship rocket — reached a major reusability milestone when they both landed in the water after launch.

Super Heavy landed in the Gulf of Mexico minutes after liftoff. But Starship's splashdown was even more impressive. The rocket ship flew into space, briefly cruised above Earth, and screamed back through the atmosphere at about 17,000 mph, enduring plasma lashing it at temperatures of up to 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit.

A screengrab from SpaceX's livestream shows a camera view aboard Starship as the vehicle plows through Earth's atmosphere on its fall.SpaceX via X

As it approached the Indian Ocean, Starship fired its engines in an effort to flip itself upright and slow itself down, practicing a controlled landing. It's not clear how soft the landing was, as the spaceship was clearly shredding pieces on the livestream and visibility became poor as it approached the water.

You can see small pieces of Starship's fin flying off as it reenters Earth's atmosphere.SpaceX

Whatever happened, the ship completed its mission by sinking into the ocean.

Advertisement

Believe it or not, cannonballing into the sea is a big deal for Starship. Last time it attempted the feat, in March, it disintegrated midfall.

A screengrab from Starship's reentry video in March shows ultra-hot plasma gathering on the spaceship's belly.SpaceX via X

Now Starship and its Super Heavy booster are one big step closer to fulfilling their revolutionary promise of being the first fully reusable rocket system capable of reaching orbit. If Starship can translate this ocean landing into a land landing, it could slash the cost of spaceflight significantly.

A screengrab from SpaceX's livestream of the June 6, 2024 launch shows Starship sitting atop its Super Heavy booster on the launchpad.SpaceX via X

Then, of course, there are Elon Musk's Mars ambitions. Starship is the vehicle that's supposed to build his city on the red planet, with a population of 1 million people.

"No rocket before this has had the potential to extend life to another planet," Musk, who founded SpaceX in 2002 for this very purpose, said in April, standing before Starship at the company's Texas facilities.

Starship's 4th flight to space

The giant launch system, standing taller than the Statue of Liberty, fired its Raptor engines and roared past its launchpad in Texas on Thursday morning.

Advertisement

The launch wasn't perfect — one engine failed to light. But the rocket still worked.

One of the engines on SpaceX's Super Heavy booster was not lit during its fourth launch.SpaceX

Just as it did on its flight in March, the rocket's Super Heavy booster separated from the Starship rocket ship high above Earth, allowing the winged spacecraft to continue into space.

Starship cruises through space on its fourth launch.SpaceX

The booster fell back to Earth, practiced firing its engines to lower itself as if it were landing on solid ground, and splash-landed in the Gulf of Mexico.

SpaceX reaches a major new milestone by landing its Super Heavy booster in the Gulf of Mexico.SpaceX

That checked off SpaceX's first vehicle-return goal for the flight. Next was Starship itself.

On its plummet back to Earth in March, Starship fell out of communications. SpaceX eventually declared it lost, likely broken apart or blown up by the stress of reentering the atmosphere.

Advertisement

But on Thursday the rocket ship survived the fall, splashing into the ocean and completing its first full flight.

It wasn't unscathed, though. One of its flaps began to rip off and shred midfall, and the camera offering the live view cracked.

Starship's fin rips off on the livestream.SpaceX

Next step: catch the rocket with 'chopsticks'

No orbital launch system on Earth is fully reusable. SpaceX pioneered reusing the lower stage of a rocket — its booster — with the Falcon 9, the workhorse that takes NASA missions and Starlink satellites to orbit.

Starship-Super Heavy is poised to be the first system to also reuse the upper stage: the spaceship that enters orbit after the booster falls away.

A Starship prototype already proved that it could lower itself to a soft landing from a flight 6 miles above Texas, albeit after several explosive failed attempts. But returning from orbital heights to land in one piece is another feat.

Advertisement
SpaceX's Starship serial No. 8 rocket-ship prototype careens toward a landing pad in Boca Chica, Texas.SpaceX

On its next flight, SpaceX might attempt to catch the Super Heavy booster with giant "chopsticks" on its Texas launch tower.

"I think the odds of actually catching the booster with the tower, probably like 80% or 90% this year," Musk said in April. "Which is insane. Like actually, when we first talked about it, it sounded so batshit crazy."

As for Starship, the upper stage, it might not descend from space to an actual landing pad until next year, he said.

"We just need to be confident that we can get through the high heating portion of the reentry reliably, and then we will bring the ship back and we'll land on the tower as well," Musk said.

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article