SPACEX

SpaceX Scrubs Test Flight of Powerful Starship Rocket

The rocket could play a critical and historic role in taking people to the moon, and eventually getting humans to Mars.

NBC Universal, Inc.

SpaceX on Monday scrubbed its planned first orbital launch of a fully-stacked Starship, the world's largest and most powerful rocket, from its Starbase in Boca Chica, Texas.

The company plans to reschedule a launch attempt in the coming days, with a minimum of 48 hours before it can make another attempt.

The rocket could play a critical and historic role in taking people to the moon, and eventually getting humans to Mars.

SpaceX founder Elon Musk envisions using Starships to send people to the moon and Mars. NASA has already signed up for a Starship to put astronauts on the lunar surface as early as 2025.

SpaceX describes the shiny, stainless steel Starship as "a fully reusable transportation system designed to carry both crew and cargo to Earth orbit, help humanity return to the Moon, and travel to Mars and beyond."

Starship, SpaceX said, "is also capable of point-to-point transport on Earth, enabling travel to anywhere in the world in one hour or less."

The Federal Aviation Administration issued SpaceX a five-year Vehicle Operator License on Friday afternoon, the final hurdle in the private company's pursuit of sending the massive vehicle into orbit.

No people or satellites will be aboard the rocket during Starship's test flight, which will attempt to send Starship into orbit around the Earth before landing in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Kauai, Hawaii.

Anticipating Friday's regulatory approval, SpaceX recently stacked Starship Prototype 24 on Super Heavy booster Prototype 7 in preparation for the upcoming launch. Together the fully-stacked vehicle stands at nearly 400 feet.

SpaceX has tested both Starship and the Super Heavy 33-engine rocket with separate test flights of each. The next launch will be the first orbital test of a fully-stacked rocket with Starship attached.

SpaceX is scheduled to launch Monday in what is said to be the most daring leap yet in an attempt to ferry people to the moon and Mars. If the mission is a success, Elon Musk's remote launch site in Boca Chica in South Texas will make history. NBC 5's Candace Sweat spoke with an expert about the mission.

Ken Ruffin is president of the National Space Society of North Texas. He said conditions for launch must be right.

“There’s always a list of reason why rocket launches could be postponed. It could be because of wind, or it could be because of lighting,” said Ruffin.

Ruffin said this is huge step in a direction some never thought possible.

“Eventually the expectation is to get to the point that, whether it’s SpaceX initially and then at some point NASA, will approve the Starship for being human rated, meaning being approved to carry people,” Ruffin said. “And this is actually expected within the next two years or so.”

Engineers at SpaceX have also built what they describe as "the world’s tallest rocket launch and catch tower." The tower is nearly 500 feet tall and is designed to perform multiple functions including assisting in stacking Starship on top of the rocket, launching the integrated vehicle and then catching the Super Heavy rocket booster upon its return to the launch site.

"For the first flight test, the team will not attempt a vertical landing of Starship or a catch of the Super Heavy booster," SpaceX said, adding that both will have water landings with the Super Heavy rocket coming down in the Gulf of Mexico and Starship coming down in the Pacific Ocean.

The FAA said Friday that SpaceX has passed a comprehensive evaluation process and met all safety, environmental, policy, payload, airspace integration and financial responsibility requirements.

"We carefully analyzed the public safety risks during every stage of the mission and required SpaceX to mitigate those risks," the FAA added.

For the first time, the FAA will identify and reroute aircraft directly affected by the closed airspace during the launch window, allowing more aircraft to stay on their most optimal and efficient routes. The FAA said this process has previously only been used for launches from the Florida space coast.

Space enthusiasts throughout North Texas and beyond who are interested in humanity's exciting future in space are cordially invited to:

1. Complete the NSS membership application at  space.nss.org/ 

2. Forward the NSS membership confirmation email to me at ken.ruffin@nss.org 

3. Ken Ruffin will reply that the new NSS member also has a one-year complimentary membership to the National Space Society of North Texas (NSS-NT)

4. NSS members can access discounted registration rates for the 41st annual International Space Development Conference (ISDC) at the Embassy Suites by Hilton Dallas Frisco Hotel and Convention Center from May 25-28, 2023. NSS-NT is the host chapter.


NBC 5 and The Associated Press.
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