NewsSpace's starship suffers mid-flight loss, booster lands safely

Space's starship suffers mid‑flight loss, booster lands safely

The Starship spacecraft lost contact with the base on Thursday and disintegrated in the air during its seventh test flight. However, the first stage of the Super Heavy booster rocket landed successfully for the second time, as mechanical arms captured it again.

Elon Musk
Elon Musk
Images source: © Getty Images | Brandon Bell
Przemysław Ciszak

Starship launched just after 5:30 PM Eastern Time from SpaceX's spaceport in Boca Chica, Texas. After successfully detaching from the Super Heavy booster and about 8 minutes into the flight, at an altitude of 146 kilometres above the Earth and flying at a speed of over 16,900 kilometres per hour, the spacecraft stopped transmitting data and was "considered lost."

SpaceX transmission host Dan Huot announced that telemetry with the spacecraft had been lost, resulting in a lack of communication. He stated that, at this stage, the spaceship is presumed lost.

"Unplanned rapid disassembly"

SpaceX later confirmed that Starship experienced an "unplanned rapid disassembly," which in industry jargon means it broke apart.

"Teams will continue to review data from today's flight test to better understand root cause. With a test like this, success comes from what we learn, and today's flight will help us improve Starship's reliability," the company stated.

The failure occurred before the detachment of the rocket's engines and the main phase of Thursday's mission, which was intended to involve deploying payloads simulating Starlink satellites into orbit. According to the plan, the spacecraft was then supposed to return to Earth and crash into the waters of the Indian Ocean.

The landing was successful nevertheless

Despite the failure of the Starship mission, the company successfully landed the first stage of the Super Heavy rocket for the second time in history. The rocket returned to the launch site and was caught in the air by mechanical arms.

Starship is a 123-metre-tall mega-rocket. Its first stage is the booster (or launch module) Super Heavy, powered by 33 Raptor methane-oxygen engines. The second stage is the Starship, which is the actual spacecraft with 6 similar engines. The rocket is intended to carry the most significant payloads into orbit and significantly reduce the costs of such transport. One version of the spacecraft is also planned for landing on the Moon as part of the Artemis III mission.

SpaceX emphasizes that the rocket tested on Thursday was an experimental vehicle into which new elements were introduced after the November test, which was also partially unsuccessful.

The propulsion system was redesigned, including increasing the volume of fuel tanks by 25%, using vacuum insulation for fuel lines, introducing a new engine power supply system, and improving the propulsion avionics module.

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