SpaceX launch a first in triumph of reusability
Thursday’s SpaceX launch marks the first time that a rocket has flown a payload to orbit, landed vertically and then was reused, an important milestone in the effort to reduce the cost of spaceflight.
From a distance, it looked like any other rocket at Florida’s Kennedy Space Center, a soaring tower of thrust and power, ready to blast off into orbit. Upon closer inspection, though, there were signs of something different about this particular rocket.
The Falcon 9’s first stage booster was not shiny as they usually are. It was just a touch dull, showing, ever so slightly, the scorched wear from its first launch, almost a year ago — a “flight proven” rocket, as Elon Musk’s SpaceX likes to call it. On Thursday evening, almost one year after it had previously flown the Falcon 9 rocket, SpaceX launched it again.
Important milestone
The flight, at 6:27 p.m., marked the first time ever that a rocket had flown a payload to orbit, landed vertically and then was reused. The launch signaled an important milestone, capping years worth of work and some fiery theatrics of boosters screaming back from space only to explode in failed attempts to land on ships at sea.
In December 2015, however, SpaceX was able to land its first rocket on a landing pad at Cape Canaveral. And then a few months later it did it again, this time at sea. Since then, it has made landing rockets as exciting — or more so — than the 3-2-1, bonerattling liftoffs of fire and smoke that have reignited interest in space.
After the successful launch, an emotional Musk called it, “an incredible milestone in the history of space.”
Once aloft, the Falcon 9 boosters perform a bit of aerial acrobatics, turning around and then flying back to Earth. Guided by computer algorithms and GPS navigation, they make their way through the clouds to their target, slowing down by firing their engines again, until they touch down softly, with remarkable, near bull’s-eye precision.
Rabid fan base
All of those daring feats, though, are meant to serve a higher purpose than entertaining the company’s growing and at times rabid fan base, which treats launches like groupies do rock concerts. The real goal is to dramatically lower the cost of spaceflight, making it accessible as the company pursues its ultimate goal of reaching Mars.
That has taken a lot of ingenuity — and computing power. Up until recently, the first stages of rockets were traditionally discarded, thrown away into the ocean after providing the initial power to escape Earth’s gravity.
Delivering satellite
Thursday’s flight was the first time a rocket designed to deliver a payload to orbit — a more difficult feat than Blue Origin’s suborbital flights — had been launched anew. And it came during a mission to deliver a commercial satellite for SES, a Luxembourg-based satellite operations company, to what’s known as geostationary orbit, more than 22,000 miles high.
“What SpaceX did today is a historic accomplishment,” said Alan Stern, a former NASA executive and chairman of the board of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation. “They are transforming the future of space exploration.”