SpaceX Starship suspended from flight after Thursday explosion

SpaceX Starship suspended from flight after Thursday explosion
SpaceX Starship suspended from flight after Thursday explosion

SpaceX’s Starship rocket was suspended from flight on Friday by the US aviation regulator, the FAA, which asked the company to open an investigation after the second stage of its rocket exploded on Thursday the day before. above the Caribbean.

During the 7th test flight of its Starship megarocket, the largest ever built, Elon Musk’s company managed to catch up with the first stage for the second time, a complex and spectacular maneuver. But the second stage of the device was then subject to “unscheduled rapid disassembly”, in the words of SpaceX. After this explosion, the FAA indicated that it had briefly diverted planes around a “space vehicle debris falling zone”.

Friday, in a press release announcing the suspension of Starship flights, it also indicated “working with SpaceX and the relevant authorities to confirm damage to property in the Turks and Caicos Islands”, in the Caribbean, specifying that it There was no information about any injuries. Images on social media taken from these Caribbean islands show streaks of light descending from the sky, which are debris from the ship.

According to the procedure, SpaceX flights will be able to resume when it has submitted its investigation to the FAA, which must include “corrective measures”, and received the green light from the regulator. SpaceX may also submit a request to resume flights before the end of the investigation if it demonstrates that it has taken preventive measures and that the incident did not endanger the safety of the public.

The Starship megarocket should allow SpaceX and Elon Musk to reach the planet Mars and the American space agency, NASA, intends to use a modified version for its Artemis missions intended to return to the Moon in the coming years.

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SpaceX is known for stringing together high-risk tests in order to quickly adapt its rocket depending on the problems encountered. A risky method which made it successful and allowed it to take a big lead over its competitor Blue Origin, the space company of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. The latter successfully carried out its first flight into orbit on Thursday.

After the explosion, SpaceX said on X, the social network that Elon Musk also owns, that Thursday’s flight would help “improve Starship’s reliability.”

The man who last year became a great ally of the next American president, Donald Trump, had for his part clarified on the same network that the explosion had probably been triggered by an “oxygen/fuel leak”.

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