SpaceX launches its biggest rocket yet in test flight from Texas | SpaceX

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SpaceX launched its largest and most powerful spacecraft on a test flight Friday, an improved version that NASA is counting on to land astronauts on the Moon.

The redesigned mega-rocket debuted two days after SpaceX CEO Elon Musk announced he was taking the company public. It took off from the southern tip of Texas, carrying 20 fake Starlink satellites that will be launched halfway around the world.

This is the 12th test flight of the rocket Musk is building to one day bring humans to Mars. But first comes the Moon and NASA’s Artemis program.

The last of the old spacecraft took off in October. SpaceX’s third-generation Starship – an upgraded version dubbed V3 – has lifted off from a brand new launch pad at Starbase, near the Mexican border. Last-minute problems thwarted Thursday evening’s launch attempt.

SpaceX hoped to avoid the fireworks it experienced during back-to-back launches last year, when mid-flight explosions rained wreckage across the Atlantic. Previous flights also ended in flames.

At 407 feet (124 meters), the latest model dwarfs older Starship lines by several feet and offers more engine thrust.

Starship is meant to be fully reusable, with giant mechanical arms on the launch pads to catch returning rocket stages. But during this last attempt, nothing was recovered. The Gulf of Mexico marked the end of the road for the redesigned first stage booster, and the Indian Ocean for the spacecraft and its satellite demonstrations.

NASA is paying billions of dollars to SpaceX – as well as Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin – to provide the lunar landers that will be used to land Artemis astronauts on the Moon.

Both companies are fighting to be first.

While Starship has reached the edge of space on several flights of up to an hour, Bezos’ Blue Moon has yet to take off, although a prototype is being prepared for a shot at the moon later this year.

NASA is following up the successful flyby of the Moon by four astronauts in April with a docking test in orbit around Earth planned for next year. For this Artemis III mission, astronauts will practice docking their Orion capsule with Starship, Blue Moon, or both.

A two-astronaut moon landing – Artemis IV – could follow as early as 2028 using Starship or Blue Moon, depending on which lander is safest and ready first. This will be NASA’s first crewed moon landing since Apollo 17 in 1972. The objective this time is a lunar base near the lunar south pole, staffed by astronauts as well as robots.

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