Archive for the ‘Spacex’ Category

SpaceX Dragon cargo capsule returns to Earth from ISS – Space.com

A SpaceX cargo ship laden with science has returned to Earth.

SpaceX's robotic Dragon spacecraft undocked from the International Space Station (ISS) on Thursday (Dec. 21) at 5:05 p.m. EST (2205 GMT), as the two spacecraft were flying over the southwest coast of Chile.

Dragon then splashed down off the coast of Tallahassee, Florida, around 12:30 p.m. EST (1730 GMT) on Friday (Dec. 22) as planned, SpaceX confirmed via X (formerly known as Twitter).

Thursday's departure was originally scheduled for Dec. 14, but it was delayed repeatedly due to bad weather in the splashdown zone.

Related: SpaceX Dragon cargo ship docks at ISS with laser experiment and more (video)

The CRS-29 Dragon craft arrived at the space station on Nov. 11 carrying 6,500 pounds (nearly 3,000 kilograms) of supplies for ISS astronauts, along with a laser experiment. (CRS stands for "Commercial Resupply Services," and this is the 29th such mission SpaceX has flown to the ISS for NASA.)

Dragon brought home to Earth about 3,500 pounds (1,588 kg) of science and hardware, NASA officials wrote in a blog post last week. Also inside Dragon are cargo bags, bearing hardware and some trash.

While Dragon isn't the only cargo ship for ISS activities, it is unique among the set in that it is designed to survive the fiery re-entry into Earth's atmosphere. This capability allows researchers to retrieve science samples that require refrigeration, or to receive hardware when it is unneeded or requires repairs for shipment back to space.

Two Russian cargo ships, Progress 85 and 86, are also docked to the space station right now, alongside Northrop Grumman's Cygnus-19 spacecraft. The other currently docked ISS ships are for crew: The Crew-7 SpaceX Dragon spacecraft designed to carry four astronauts, and the Russian Soyuz MS-24 with three seats on board for crew.

Editor's note: This story was updated at 5:20 p.m. EST on Dec. 21 with news of successful undocking, then again at 1:10 p.m. EST on Dec. 22 with news of splashdown.

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Watch Amazing Views Of How SpaceX’s Starship 25 And Super Heavy Booster 9 Liftoff And Separation | Watch – MSN

Watch Amazing Views Of How SpaceX's Starship 25 And Super Heavy Booster 9 Liftoff And Separation | Watch  MSN

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SpaceX kicks off Starship testing ahead of next test flight – TESLARATI

SpaceX kicks off Starship testing ahead of next test flight  TESLARATI

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SpaceX kicks off Starship testing ahead of next test flight - TESLARATI

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Kennedy Space Center Looks Ahead to Busy 2024 – NASA

Another jam-packed year is in store for NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida as the momentum of a busy 2023 is carried forward into the new year. On the horizon are missions to the Moon, more crew and cargo flights to the International Space Station, and several upgrade projects across the spaceport.

NASAs first CLPS (Commercial Lunar Payload Services) initiative mission with Astrobotics Peregrine lunar lander is set to begin work in 2024 after lifting off on the inaugural launch of United Launch Alliances Vulcan Centaur rocket. These missions will help the agency develop capabilities needed to explore the Moon under Artemis ahead of sending astronauts to the lunar surface.

Another CLPS mission, set for launch early in the year aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, will send the Intuitive Machines Nova-C lander to a landing site at the Moons South Pole region. The mission will carry NASA payloads focusing on plume-surface interactions, space weather/lunar surface interactions, radio astronomy, precision landing technologies, and a communication and navigation node for future autonomous navigation technologies.

Development toward Artemis II, NASAs first crewed test flight of its lunar-focused Artemis program continues across Kennedy. SLS (Space Launch System) hardware, including twin solid rocket boosters and a 212-foot-tall core stage for the Artemis II mission, will begin stacking and integration inside the Vehicle Assembly Building in the coming months, after which teams will begin a series of testing prior to launch. Processing also is underway on the core stage for Artemis III.

The Artemis II Orion crew and service modules will continue prelaunch processing inside Kennedys Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building alongside the crew modules for Artemis III and Artemis IV NASAs initial missions to land the next humans on the lunar surface.

NASA and its commercial partners, Boeing and SpaceX, have three Commercial Crew Program missions set to fly from Floridas Space Coast, setting up another busy year of traffic for the International Space Station in 2024. Teams are readying for the short-duration Crew Flight Test of Boeings CST-100 Starliner no earlier than April. Meanwhile, NASA and SpaceX will continue crew rotation missions to the orbiting laboratory with Crew-8 expected no earlier than mid-February and Crew-9 to follow in mid-August.

Other crewed missions to the space station include SpaceX and Axiom Spaces short-duration Axiom Mission 3 and Axiom Mission 4 private astronaut missions.

SpaceXs Polaris Dawn, the second private short-duration orbital flight will also lift off from Kennedy with four individuals that plan to attempt the first-ever commercial spacewalk.

Along with crewed flights, three of the agencys Commercial Resupply Services missions hosted on SpaceXs Dragon cargo spacecraft, Northrop Grummans Cygnus, and the debut flight of Sierra Spaces cargo spaceplane, Dream Chaser, are slated to fly from Kennedy next year to deliver thousands of pounds of supplies, equipment, and science investigations to the orbiting laboratory.

NASAs Launch Services Program based at Kennedy has several science and CubeSat missions manifested to fly on commercial rockets next year. They represent a mix of some of the agencys most complex robotic and scientific missions, as well as smaller cost-efficient missions, and missions sponsored by NASAs CubeSat Launch Initiative.

The first of three primary missions is NASAs PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem) spacecraft that will launch early next year on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. PACEs science goals include extending ocean color, atmospheric aerosol, and cloud data records for Earth system and climate studies.

GOES-U (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-U) is slated to launch in April on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket, the fourth and final satellite in NOAAs GOES-R Series of advanced geostationary weather-observing satellites. Scheduled for an October launch on a Falcon Heavy, the agencys Europa Clipper mission will investigate Jupiters moon Europa to determine if it has conditions suitable to support life.

Among the small spacecraft and CubeSat missions slated to launch in 2024 are two dedicated launches on Rocket Labs Electron for PREFIRE (Polar Radiant Energy in the Infrared Experiment), which aims to give researchers a more accurate picture of the energy entering and leaving Earth. Blue Origins New Glenn rocket will host NASAs EscaPADE (Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers) mission that will send two spacecraft to study solar wind energy and momentum through Mars unique hybrid magnetosphere.

While next years expected cadence of nearly 100 launches from Floridas Space Coast is likely to mirror 2023s record-setting pace, something else to look out for will be upgrade and sustainability efforts around the spaceport.

The Indian River Bridge construction project, which opened the first of two spans in June of 2023, and the solar site 6 project of the Utility Energy Services Contract, are expected to wrap up and become fully operational next year.

Restoration and beautification efforts across Kennedy also include the consideration of several sites for development into natural wildflower prairies. In the spring, Spaceport Integrations sustainability team will work on Project Arbor at the Spaceport. It will focus on planting Florida native trees and one seedling from the Artemis Moon Tree project along the Fitness Trail near Operations Support Building II to provide shade, benefit wildlife, and help improve air quality.

A historical marker sponsored by NASA and the Florida Department of State will be installed in early 2024 at the site of Kennedys original Headquarters Building making it the first to be located within Kennedys secure area.

As 2023 draws to a close, Kennedy Space Center is gearing up to support more groundbreaking missions that will expand human knowledge of Earth and our solar system while protecting the local ecosystem and natural resources.

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Kennedy Space Center Looks Ahead to Busy 2024 - NASA

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SpaceX dominated private spaceflight in 2023, but its competitors (mostly) aren’t quitting – Engadget

Its been a busy year for spaceflight the busiest ever, in fact. This fall, space companies once again broke the record for successful orbital launches in a single year with 2023s 180th flight. That record was broken when SpaceX sent up Starlink satellites on November 22, according to Ars Technica. The number has since climbed to 200.

That pace has been driven in no small part by Elon Musks aerospace venture, which set a goal of hitting 100 launches in 2023 and is nearly there, with 92 as of December 7. Private companies have become key players in the new space race, not only vying to serve as launch providers for science and communications missions but also ushering in the era of space tourism (for anyone rich enough to nab a ticket). But spaceflight is hard, especially if youre trying to change the game with design innovations, and for all the wins in 2023, there have been plenty of hiccups. Heres a look at how some of the leading private space companies made out this year.

SpaceX seemingly didnt stop once to catch its breath in 2023. The company managed a record-setting run of orbital launches with its reusable Falcon 9 and partially reusable Falcon Heavy rockets, with the lions share dedicated to delivering its Starlink internet satellites to orbit. (There are now more than 5,000 of them circling Earth.) SpaceX also delivered payloads for other entities, including NASA, and carried out multiple crewed flights with its Dragon capsule. Four astronauts arrived at the International Space Station in March aboard a Crew Dragon, and Axiom Space contracted SpaceX for a private astronaut mission that flew to the ISS in May.

As for its experimental Starship flights, things were expectedly a bit more volatile. Starship is the biggest and most powerful launch vehicle built to date, and is designed to support future human spaceflight missions, including NASAs return to the moon as soon as 2025. The spacecraft itself is 165 feet tall, and when stacked on top of the Super Heavy rocket, the two tower at a combined 397 feet. Both Starship and Super Heavy are planned to be fully reusable. Its all still in development, and after a few years of suborbital flight tests without Super Heavy Starship has six of its own Raptor engines that enable flight the vehicle advanced to orbital tests in 2023.

SpaceX launched Starship for the first time in an integrated flight with its Super Heavy rocket on April 20, and there were problems from the moment liftoff began. Multiple engines failed, and when Starship started its flip maneuver that allows for stage separation about 3 minutes in, it just kept spinning. It was eventually given the command to self-destruct, ending the test with an explosion.

The launch left behind a lot of damage on the ground, too, tearing up the launchpad at SpaceXs Boca Chica test site, creating a sizable crater and starting a 3.5 acre fire on the grounds of a protected wildlife refuge. But for SpaceX, it was still considered a success its goal was just to clear the tower. Starship made it to an altitude of about 24 miles before it got caught in that uncontrolled spin. Nevertheless, the Federal Aviation Administration grounded Starship after the destructive test, and ordered the company to complete dozens of corrective actions before it could fly again.

Starship did fly again before the end of 2023, and again Starship exploded. This time, though, Starship officially made it to space, climbing to about 92 miles above Earth. It also performed SpaceXs first attempt at hot staging where the upper stage begins to fire its engines while still attached to its lower stage and was able to complete separation from the Super Heavy booster. It fell well short of the planned 90-minute flight, lasting only around eight minutes, but it demonstrated hot staging was possible.

Jeff Bezos Blue Origin had a strong run between late 2021 and 2022 with its reusable New Shepard suborbital booster and capsule, completing six crewed flights to the edge of space following years of tests and payload missions for industry clients including NASA. But in September 2022, one of its rockets suffered a main engine failure during an uncrewed research mission, and New Shepard spent a subsequent 15 months grounded.

After investigations into the cause of the event, the companys then-CEO Bob Smith who is stepping down in the new year said in June 2023 that New Shepard would again be ready to go fly within the next few weeks pending FAA approval. The FAA closed its investigation at the end of September and gave Blue Origin 21 corrective actions to complete before New Shepard could take to the skies again. Around that time, Ars Technica reported that sources close to the matter said Blue Origin was targeting an October return to flight, but that window came and went with no liftoff or further updates. While it was starting to look like Blue Origin wouldnt fly at all in 2023, the company finally announced New Shepards return in mid-December, and pulled off a successful suborbital payload flight on December 19.

Its mostly been crickets for Blue Origins still-in-development New Glenn, as the company races to get it ready for its debut. New Glenn, a partially reusable heavy lift vehicle, is expected to make its inaugural flight sometime in 2024. Its already been tapped by NASA to send a pair of small satellites to Mars later that year, but the timeline keeps slipping. It was originally supposed to launch in 2020, but was later rescheduled to 2021, then 2022 and now 2024. The company shared some photos of the rockets first and second stage being assembled at its Florida factory over the summer, and confirmed to the Orlando Sentinelthat it was still shooting for next year.

Blue Origin has also been busy building engines for another launch provider, United Launch Alliance, which will be used for ULAs heavy-lift Vulcan Centaur rocket. Both New Glenn and Vulcan will rely on Blue Origins BE-4 engine, and have faced delays tied to its development. Most recently, in July, CNBC reported that one of these engines exploded during testing at Blue Origins West Texas facility.

ULA had a quiet year as well, carrying out only three launches in 2023 with its Atlas V and Delta IV Heavy rockets down from eight the year before. Both rockets are in the process of winding down their operations ahead of their official retirement. Delta IV Heavy has just one flight left, which is expected to take place in 2024, and all of Atlas Vs remaining flights have been sold and scheduled out over the next several years. One of ULAs few 2023 launches was the first flight in its partnership with Amazon, and an Atlas V rocket successfully delivered two of the companys prototype Project Kuiper internet satellites to orbit.

Most of ULAs attention right now is focused on putting the final touches on Vulcan ahead of its maiden flight. Vulcan has been in development for roughly a decade, and it, too, has faced years of delays. There was some hope it would finally launch in the first half of 2023, with the company targeting liftoff in May, but after the explosion of a Centaur upper stage during tests, it pushed this target to the end of the year. In October, ULA had said it was planning to launch Vulcan for the first time on Christmas Eve from Cape Canaveral, Florida. But, in an update posted this week, the company confirmed Vulcan wouldn't be flying in 2023 after all.

The rocket completed some critical tests in December, and is now scheduled to fly on January 8, 2024. Vulcans first flight, dubbed Certification-1, will send Astrobotics Peregrine lunar lander to the moon. Once Vulcan is in operation, ULA will start ramping up flights again. Its already got a contract with Amazon for 38 Project Kuiper launches on Vulcan. It just needs to get off the ground first.

Over the last few years, Rocket Lab has risen as a company to watch in the launch sector. In the first few months of 2023, it seemed on track to beat its 2022 record of nine orbital launches in one year with its Electron rocket. The company told SpaceFlight Now it was targeting 15 launches this time around. It made it to seven by the end of August, but in September, a problem with the rockets upper stage resulted in its failure to reach orbit. Rocket Lab has at least three dozen successful Electron flights under its belt, and only a handful of failures, but the latest is the third such failure in as many years.

Whether or not it proves to be a major setback has yet to be seen. The FAA in October cleared Rocket Lab to resume flights following the finalization of its investigation into the issue, which wrapped up in November. According to Rocket Lab, the problem was caused by the rare interaction of three rare conditions in the low-pressure space environment that created an unexpected electrical arc within the power supply system for the engines motor controllers, shorting the battery packs that provide power to the launch vehicles second stage. The company was still able to return to flight before the end of the year. On December 15, an Electron rocket delivered a Japanese satellite to orbit in a mission dubbed The Moon God Awakens.

Rocket Lab has been experimenting with different ways to recover its Electron boosters after flight including mid-air catch attempts via helicopter as it works toward rocket reusability. Its also developing a medium-lift, partially reusable launch vehicle, Neutron, thats expected to be completed in 2024.

Virgin Galactic, founded by Richard Branson, managed a steady cadence of flights this year with its VSS Unity suborbital spaceplane. The rocket-powered craft made six flights in six months in 2023, including its first ever space tourism trip in August. In addition to research missions, its now completed a total of four flights with paying tourists on board, all of them completed between this summer and fall.

The company took a bit of a hit on the stock market in December, though, after Branson said he wouldnt be putting any more of his own money into it. Speaking to the Financial Times, Branson said, We dont have the deepest pockets after COVID, and Virgin Galactic has got $1 billion, or nearly. It should, I believe, have sufficient funds to do its job on its own. Following his comments, shares took a nosedive. But, theyve since climbed back up.

Virgin Orbit, on the other hand, didnt fare so well in 2023. Bransons Virgin Galactic spinoff announced in May that it was shutting down a month after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company was formed in 2017 with the intention of becoming a launch provider for small satellite missions. It had a unique approach to getting payloads to space; Virgin Orbit used a modified Boeing 747 plane to launch its rocket, LauncherOne, from the air.

But it struggled to keep up with the competition, and in January, it suffered a failure during what was the first ever orbital launch from the UK. As a result, the satellites it had been commissioned by the UK and US governments to deliver didnt make it to orbit. It was the companys second failure out of a total of just six missions, and it proved unable to rebound.

California-based Relativity Space has been working for years to build the first fully 3D-printed reusable rockets, with plans for an eventual medium-to-heavy-lift vehicle that could send missions to the moon and Mars. Its first rocket, Terran 1, had its inaugural launch in March this year, but it failed not long after liftoff. It hit some key milestones, though, making it through Max-Q (the point of maximum dynamic pressure on a spaceship during flight) and stage separation. Now, Relativity Space is turning its attention to its larger vehicle, Terran R, which it plans to have ready for launch in 2026 from Cape Canaveral.

ABL Space, also based in California, conducted its own first flight in 2023 with the launch of its RS1 rocket. Shortly after liftoff, all nine of RS1s engines shut down, causing the vehicle to crash back down to Earth. In a Substack post at the end of October, CEO Harry OHanley detailed some of the work the company has been doing in the months since the first flight to prepare for its second launch, but no date for Flight 2 has been announced just yet.

In many ways, 2023 has felt like a primer for whats to come in 2024, which is shaping up to be a big year for spaceflight based on the timelines of current projects, both private and government-sponsored. SpaceX has already said its planning to hit 12 launches a month in 2024, which would bring it to 144 by the end of the year.

This year marked the end of the road for Arianespaces long-running Ariane 5 rocket, which has become the leading launch vehicle in Europe for heavy missions over its 27 years of service. Ariane 5 had its final flight in July, leaving the continent with few launch options for big missions until the release of its successor, Ariane 6. Like others, though, Ariane 6 has been hit by delay after delay over the years, pushing it way behind its originally targeted 2020 debut. The rocket, which Arianespace is developing for the European Space Agency, is expected to make its first flight in summer 2024.

NASA and Boeing are planning the first crewed flight of the Starliner reusable spacecraft capsule, which after being back for the umpteenth time this year, is now slated to be ready around March 2024. NASA also plans to launch the next phase of its moon mission, Artemis II, as early as November 2024. It will be the second flight for NASAs Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, and will have four astronauts aboard the Orion capsule for a lunar flyby. But as always, itd be reasonable to expect some delays.

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SpaceX dominated private spaceflight in 2023, but its competitors (mostly) aren't quitting - Engadget

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