Eight minutes after Starship detached from its Super Heavy first stage booster in space, SpaceX mission control in Texas lost communication with the spacecraft. On Thursday, SpaceX launched its Starship rocket on its most recent test mission; however, after an exciting booster grab back at the pad, the spaceship was destroyed. In the company’s seventh test mission and first this year, the rocket took off from the launch facility in Boca Chica, Texas, at 5:38 p.m. EST.
Social media users shared footage of the Starship fragments falling from the sky. (X/Elon Musk) After Starship separated from its Super Heavy first stage booster in space, SpaceX mission control in Texas lost communication eight minutes into the journey, according to a live stream from SpaceX Communications Manager Dan Huot.
He said, “It was great to see a booster come down, but we are bummed out about the ship.”
Elon Musk, the latter owner of SpaceX, promised that improved ships and launchers were already ready for the next launches. “Improved versions of the ship & booster are already waiting for launch,” he stated.
Minutes after taking off from Texas, SpaceX utilised enormous mechanical arms to retrieve the booster at the pad for the second time before the loss. After hovering over the launch pad, the falling booster was grabbed by a pair of chopstick-like mechanical arms.
In a post on X, SpaceX discussed the launch’s results, stating, “Starship experienced a rapid unscheduled disassembly during its ascent burn. Teams will continue to review data from today’s flight test to better understand the root cause. With a test like this, success comes from what we learn, and today’s flight will help us improve Starship’s reliability.”
What caused SpaceX Starship 7 to fail?
Similar to earlier test flights, the spacecraft was intended to fly across the Gulf of Mexico on a nearly complete circle of the globe. To practice its release, SpaceX had loaded it with ten dummy satellites.
It was this new and improved spacecraft’s first flight. In the late afternoon, the 400-foot (123-meter) rocket thundered away from Boca Chica, which is close to the Mexican border. Halfway around the world, daylight access was guaranteed by the late hour. A Reuters report claims that an upper-stage malfunction was the cause of the Starship’s demise.
Since the rocket broke apart during its second test mission in March of last year while it was re-entering Earth’s atmosphere, SpaceX has not experienced a second-stage failure with the Starship.
The team had to abandon a capture attempt after the launch in November damaged sensors on the robotic arms, so the business strengthened the catch tower. Instead, that booster was guided into the gulf. But that wasn’t an issue this time.
For the most recent demonstration, the business also upgraded the spacecraft. Like the spaceship, the test satellites were designed to drop into the Indian Ocean to complete the mission. They were the same size as SpaceX’s Starlink internet satellites. About eight and a half minutes into the flight, contact was lost.
Before launching additional satellites and, eventually, humans, Musk intends to launch real Starlinks aboard Starships. It was the eighth test flight of the largest and most potent rocket in the world.
Two Starships have been reserved by NASA to land humans on the moon later this decade. Mars is Musk’s target. The newest supersized rocket, New Glenn, was launched in Florida a few hours earlier by Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, another billionaire’s rocket business.
On its first flight, the rocket successfully launched an experimental satellite hundreds of miles above Earth and entered orbit. However, the first-stage rocket was destroyed and failed to make the intended landing on an Atlantic floating platform.