Like a lot of the world, NASA watched the second check flight of SpaceX’s enormous Starship rocket intently — and we will now see what the company noticed.
That flight lifted off on Nov. 18, 2023, sending the two-stage Starship aloft from Starbase, SpaceX’s web site on Texas’ Gulf Coast. It ended eight minutes later, when Starship’s 165-foot-tall (50 meters) higher stage exploded excessive within the sky.
However the big automobile notched some necessary milestones that day, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk has pressured. For instance, the 33 Raptor engines on its first-stage booster, referred to as Tremendous Heavy, executed their 2.5-minute burn just about flawlessly. Starship’s two levels separated on time as effectively, one thing that did not occur on the first-ever flight, which launched on April 20 of final yr.
Associated: See gorgeous images and video of Starship’s 2nd launch
You may get new views of the 400-foot-tall (122 m) Starship’s flight within the NASA footage, which the company recently released by way of its FOIA (Freedom of Info Act) library.
Among the video comes from cameras aboard WB-57 jets, long-range plane which are able to flying to altitudes of 60,000 toes (18,300 m) or extra. Sadly, the footage would not present stage separation, or present attractiveness at Starship’s explosive finish.
NASA’s curiosity within the check flight shouldn’t come as a shock. The company has quite a bit invested in Starship, deciding on it as the primary crewed lunar lander for its Artemis program of moon exploration. If all goes in keeping with plan, Starship will carry astronauts to and from the lunar floor for the primary time in 2026, on the Artemis 3 mission.
We’ll see a 3rd Starship flight check quickly, if all goes in keeping with plan. SpaceX representatives have stated they will be able to launch the enormous rocket once more this month, supplied they get a license from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in time.
It is unclear if that can occur, nevertheless; the FAA remains to be overseeing an investigation into what occurred on the second flight, which ended within the detonation of each the primary and second levels.