SpaceX has rolled the Super Heavy first stage of its Starship megarocket out to the launch pad to prep for the vehicle's sixth test flight, which is scheduled for Monday (Nov. 18).
The company is gearing up for the sixth test flight of the megarocket, with plans to significantly step up Starship's launch ...
SpaceX has transported its Starship spacecraft to the launchpad in preparation for a scheduled flight test on November 18.
Blue Origin showed off its New Glenn rocket after its two stages were mated in the company's Florida facility. The new rocket ...
Watch how SpaceX conducted a static fire test of the Super Heavy booster to launch Starship's 5th test flight. Credit: ...
The booster catch was not the only goal for Flight 5 ... that SpaceX wants to launch another Starship mission relatively soon. Last month, SpaceX conducted a static fire — a common prelaunch test in ...
Work on the orbital launch mount and Pad B continues, the final Block 1 ship expected to fly is preparing for launch, and ...
Friday's liftoff marked the Falcon 9 first-stage booster’s 17th flight, SpaceX reported. This well-traveled booster previously launched mPOWER-C, OneWeb 2, Intelsat 40e, Digital Globe 2 ...
Regulators have clamped down on SpaceX in recent months, though. Since August, the TCEQ and EPA fined the company a combined ...
SpaceX's Starship is the largest rocket ever built. When fully stacked with its Super Heavy booster, it stands approximately 394 ft (120 m) tall, making it the tallest rocket ever constructed.
As remarkable as SpaceX’s Starship rocket catch was, it represents but a single step on a long path to the Moon for NASA, and on to Mars.
That catch occurred on Oct. 13, during the fifth test flight of SpaceX's Starship megarocket. Starship's huge first-stage booster, known as Super Heavy, came back to Earth about seven minutes ...