+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

SpaceX just launched a satellite - but its rocket-landing attempt was a bust

Mar 5, 2016, 06:28 IST

Advertisement
SpaceX

SpaceX successfully launched a super-fueled rocket tonight at 6:35 p.m. ET from Cape Canaveral, Florida, delivering a communications satellite 25,000 miles above the Earth.

"Successful launch, we're in orbit!" said John Insprucker, SpaceX's launch webcast announcer.

The satellite, called SES-9, should soon boost communications coverage over Asia.

SpaceX CEO and tech entrepreneur Elon Musk confirmed the mission was a success on Twitter:

Advertisement

However, the latter part of the launch - after the satellite was deployed - was the moment many viewers were waiting for: the landing of the 229-foot-tall Falcon 9 rocket's first stage on a robotic ship at sea.

The drone ship came into view on the webcast just minutes after the first stage separated from the rest of the rocket. The camera showed the glow of rocket thrusters on the ship's deck... Then the feed switched off, showing only rainbow bars:

Elon Musk later confirmed that the rocket "landed hard" on the ship and "did not survive," according to Matthew Travis, a journalist on the scene in Florida:

Advertisement

Why sticking a rocket landing is a huge deal

The Falcon 9 rocket is a very odd bird.

Most rockets cost tens or hundreds of millions of dollars, yet are rendered as junk the moment they launch. Instead of being recycled, they crash into the ocean and sink to the bottom after lofting a payload into orbit.

Just Read the Instructions now on location in the Atlantic in advance of April 14's landing attempt.SpaceX on Flickr

But after delivering SES-9 into space tonight, the Falcon 9 tried to land about half of itself on a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean.

SpaceX attempted this feat in earnest on two separate occasions in the past year, but both rocket stages exploded into fireballs on a self-guided ship called "Just Read the Instructions."

A third SpaceX rocket was equipped to land but never got the chance, since it blew up shortly after launch.

Advertisement

Those experimental failures haven't inspired much confidence. In fact, the company said in a press release for this launch that "a successful landing is not expected."

Translation: This is really, really hard and we think our rocket will probably explode into bits when it tries to land itself.

Still, the stakes can't be ignored.

First stage Falcon 9 attempting to land on barge named &quotJust Read the Instructions".Flickr/SpaceX Photos

Each Falcon 9 costs about $60 million. If the company can land even part of that hardware, clean it up, and refuel it for a future launch, it'd be a history-making event.

It might also help usher in an era of spaceflight that's radically less expensive.

Advertisement

Musk has said that a 100-fold cost reduction of access to space is possible, should his rocket-recycling scheme prove as repeatable and reliable as flying an airplane.

However, there's reason to believe SpaceX just might succeed the next time. On December 21, 2015, the company launched and landed a Falcon 9 rocket on solid ground.

It's not a robotic platform bobbing and shimmying in the Atlantic Ocean, but it's still pretty impressive.

NOW WATCH: This is how Elon Musk wants to drastically reduce the cost of space flight

Please enable Javascript to watch this video
Next Article