SpaceX says its ready for another Starship test: FAA still needs to approve the launch
- by USA Today
- Oct 11, 2024
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USA TODAY
When the Starship launch commences, it will be the fifth uncrewed test flight of a vehicle for which Musk has grand ambitions beyond NASA moon missions.
While SpaceX says it's ready for another test flight, the FAA has not yet approved another launch.
This time around, SpaceX hopes for the first time to return the Super Heavy booster rocket intact to the launch site while the Starship makes a second splashdown in the Indian Ocean.
SpaceX insists it's ready to conduct another test of its Starship megarocket as soon as Sunday despite no word from federal regulators about whether the company will be approved in time to do so.
More than four months have already passed since SpaceX has launched a test flight of the behemoth 400-foot rocket that will one day ferry NASA astronauts to the lunar surface. While the Federal Aviation Administration has previously indicated that SpaceX would not have approval for another Starship launch before late November, CEO Elon Musk has argued that the vehicle has been ready since August.
Now, Musk and SpaceX are proclaiming that the next Starship demonstration could happen as early as Sunday, "pending regulatory approval," of course. When the Starship launch commences, it will be the fifth uncrewed test flight of a vehicle for which Musk has grand ambitions beyond NASA moon missions.
In the years ahead, Musk envisions Starship serving as the spacecraft to transport humans to Mars and deep in the cosmos as part of his oft-stated goal of making "life multiplanetary." But first, the Federal Aviation Administration needs to make a determination on a license for SpaceX to undergo another Starship launch.
Here's what to know about Starship and when the next test flight could possibly happen. This time around, SpaceX hopes for the first time to return the Super Heavy booster rocket intact to the launch site.
The Starship itself is due to fly a similar trajectory as the previous flights before attempting a second successful splashdown in the Indian Ocean. The path does not require the vehicle to conduct a deorbit burn for reentry into Earth's atmosphere, though audible sonic booms are expected in the area around the landing zone as the returning booster slows down from supersonic speeds, SpaceX said.
The company said engineers have made extensive upgrades ahead of the flight test to the megarocket's hardware and software, as well as the infrastructure at Starbase itself.
"We accept no compromises when it comes to ensuring the safety of the public and our team, and the return will only be attempted if conditions are right," the company said in a statement.
Starship selected for NASA lunar missions
Starship is intended to play an integral role as early as 2026 when U.S. astronauts head back to the moon.
As part of NASA's ambitious Artemis campaign, the space agency's first lunar program since the Apollo era of the 1970s, SpaceX was paid a hefty $2.9 billion sum to develop a spacecraft capable of safely transporting astronauts from orbit to the moon's surface.
Under NASA's plans, Artemis III astronauts aboard the Orion capsule would rendezvous and dock with Starship while orbiting the moon. Two astronauts would then board the Starship for a ride to the lunar surface while the other two spacefarers remain on Orion.
In the years ahead, NASA's Artemis program aims to establish a lunar settlement on the south pole. One day, the water ice thought to be abundant in the region could be extracted and used for drinking, breathing and as a source of hydrogen and oxygen for rocket fuel to make crewed trips to Mars possible – such as the ones Musk is planning as early as 2028.
Starship's first crewed test flight is planned for the third and final mission under the Polaris Program, which SpaceX is funding along with billionaire entrepreneur Jared Isaacman. The inaugural spaceflight last month under the program, Polaris Dawn, included the first-ever commercial spacewalk with the crew aboard a Dragon capsule.
What happened on previous Starship tests?
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