After U.S. officials gave the go-ahead, SpaceX will try to launch the huge Starship rocket into orbit for the third time early Thursday morning.
Within a 110-minute time that starts at 7:00 a.m. CT, the company hopes to go live. SpaceX tests the Starship at its huge Starbase campus near Boca Chica, Texas. The launch will be livestreamed on SpaceX’s website and the social media site X at 6:30 a.m. CT, though.
So far, SpaceX has sent the 400-foot-tall rocket up for two test runs. During the first one, in April, both the upper stage (also known as Starship) and the Super Heavy rocket blew up in the air. During the second orbital test trip, the company made a lot of progress, but the vehicle was destroyed at the end of it too.
Anomalies is a polite term used in the industry to describe these events. It can mean anything from small component failures to, in the case of the Starship launches, huge explosions. The Federal Aviation Administration oversees a company-run review whenever something goes wrong during a rocket launch. The final report on the second Starship launch came out last month. This meant that the regulator had to give the test flight a launch license.
SpaceX made some changes and improvements to its hardware as part of that study and as part of its longer-term strategy for designing hardware in small steps.
In more than one way, this test makes things more important. The company wants to show off some new skills, such as transferring fuel, opening and shutting the payload door on the upper stage, and starting a Raptor engine again in space for the first time. Because of the engine burn in space, the company also wants to change the flight path so that the top stage splashes down in the Indian Ocean.
Also Read: Spacex Plans the Next Test Flight of Starship for March 14
Starship is an important part of both SpaceX’s business plans and NASA’s big Artemis program, which wants to send people back to the moon by the end of the decade.
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