SpaceX has moved its latest Starship spacecraft to the launch pad for testing forward of the megarocket’s upcoming eleventh take a look at flight.
The corporate documented the milestone right now (Sept. 17) by way of X, in a post that shared three photographs of the shiny silver Starship higher stage.
In a kind of photographs, the 171-foot-tall (52-meter-tall) spacecraft — often called Starship, or simply “Ship” — is rolling down a street at SpaceX’s Starbase web site in South Texas at nighttime. Within the different two, Ship is on the pad, nestled within the grasp of the launch tower’s “chopstick” arms.
The seemingly subsequent steps are pressurization and engine exams, which can guarantee Ship is able to fly. The identical prep work will even be finished with Tremendous Heavy, the massive booster that makes up the underside half of the totally reusable, stainless-steel Starship.
The upcoming take a look at flight, whose goal date has not but been introduced, would be the eleventh for Starship.
It was a welcome bounceback for SpaceX, which had lost Ship prematurely on the previous three test launches.
Flight 11 will be the final mission of Starship Version 2, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk has said. The company will then shift to testing Version 3 of the vehicle, which will stand about 408 feet (124.4 meters) tall — roughly 10 feet (3 m) taller than Version 2.
If Version 3 testing and development go well, a small, uncrewed fleet of these vehicles could launch toward Mars as early as next year, according to Musk. That would be a big step toward achieving his, and SpaceX’s, chief long-term goal — helping humanity settle the Red Planet.