Starship carried up eight mock satellites mimicking SpaceX’s Starlinks. The entire flight lasted just over an hour, originating from Starbase near the Mexican border.
SpaceX launched its mammoth Starship rocket on a test flight for the 11th time on Monday, successfully making it halfway around the world while releasing mock satellites.
Starship is the biggest and most powerful rocket ever built. It thundered into the evening sky from the southern tip of Texas, before the booster peeled away and made a controlled entry into the Gulf of Mexico as planned.
The spacecraft skimmed space before descending into the Indian Ocean. Nothing was recovered.
“Hey, welcome back to Earth, Starship,” SpaceX's Dan Huot announced as employees cheered. “What a day.”
SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk intends to use Starship to send people to Mars. NASA’s need is more immediate. The space agency cannot land astronauts on the moon by decade's end without the 123-metre spacecraft, the reusable vehicle meant to get them from lunar orbit down to the surface and back up.
Instead of remaining inside Launch Control as usual, Musk said that for the first time he was going outside to watch — “much more visceral.”
The previous test flight occurred in August, succeeding after a string of explosive failures. It followed a similar path with similar goals, but this time more maneuvering was built, especially for the spacecraft. SpaceX conducted a series of tests during the spacecraft's entry over the Indian Ocean as practice for future landings back at the launch site.
Like before, Starship carried up eight mock satellites mimicking SpaceX’s Starlinks. The entire flight lasted just over an hour, originating from Starbase near the Mexican border.
NASA’s acting administrator Sean Duffy praised Starship’s progress. “Another major step toward landing Americans on the moon’s south pole,” he said via X.
SpaceX is modifying its Cape Canaveral launch sites to accommodate Starships, in addition to the much smaller Falcon rockets used to transport astronauts and supplies to the International Space Station for NASA.