Orlando Sentinel

FAA closes investigat­ion into spaceship’s double explosion

‘Mishap’ probe results in 17 required new action items

- By Richard Tribou Orlando Sentinel

As SpaceX continues to gear up for flight No. 3 of its massive Starship and Super Heavy from Texas, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion has closed the investigat­ion into the second flight that resulted in explosions of both the booster and upper stages back in November.

The FAA on Monday said the SpaceX-led investigat­ion into what was classified as a “mishap,” cited 17 action items that have to be addressed before any future launch licenses from SpaceX’s Boca Chica, Texas launch site Starbase are approved.

Starship is SpaceX’s replacemen­t launch system for its Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets and is completely reusable. It’s aiming to launch a third test flight as soon as next month if it can get approval.

The first launch of Starship and Super Heavy in April 2023 also ended in an explosion, but with the booster still connected to the upper stage. That launch also walloped the launch pad, and it took more than six months to close out that mishap investigat­ion with 63 corrective actions.

The second flight performed much better despite the double combustive incidents mid-flight.

In an update from SpaceX on its website, it detailed what happened on that flight, which was part of the investigat­ion overseen by the FAA with the help of NASA and the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

Changes to the launch pad including the introducti­on of a water-cooled flame deflector were among the most visible fixes between launches one and two, “requiring minimal postlaunch work to be ready for vehicle tests and the next integrated flight test,” SpaceX reported.

That was one facet of SpaceX’s testing that was of interest to the Space Coast as its future flight plans include launches potentiall­y from Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Pad 39-A, and NASA was concerned of damage to the adjacent pad from where SpaceX flies its human spacefligh­t missions to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

As far as other improvemen­ts, the Super Heavy booster’s 33 Raptor engines stayed lit for the entire upward flight during which it generated near 17 million pounds of thrust, nearly twice that of NASA’s Space Launch System rocket.

The second flight also saw successful stage separation, using a system called hot-fire staging that allows the upper Starship stage to light its engines while still connected to the Super Heavy booster so it can maintain upward thrust. It was after the stage separation that two parts of the rocket saw their destructiv­e ends.

Changes since the launch include a shift in hardware inside the booster oxidizer tanks to help filter propellant, which would also “reduce slosh,” according to the FAA.

As far as the upper stage Starship, which has six of its own Raptor engines, its demise was not seen on the live stream, but SpaceX reported it activated the self-destruct mechanism traveling at near 15,000 mph at an altitude of 93 miles, which meant it passed the Karman line, the internatio­nally recognized boundary for having made it to space. That was a first for Starship.

The FAA said of the 17 corrective actions needed, seven were for the Super Heavy booster and 10 for the upper stage Starship.

“The FAA has been provided with sufficient informatio­n and accepts the root causes and corrective actions described in the mishap reports,” reads a letter from the FAA to SpaceX.

“Consequent­ly, the FAA considers the mishap investigat­ion that SpaceX was required to

complete to be concluded.”

For the next planned test flight, SpaceX still has yet to complete its original mission plan, which is to have the booster splash down in the Gulf of Mexico without exploding and Starship splash down at the end of its suborbital flight in the Pacific Ocean about 90 minutes later north of Hawaii.

Eventually, plans are for both parts to make vertical safe landings as part of the spacecraft’s reusable design. At a combined 397 feet tall, the fully-stacked rocket takes off from a 469-foot-tall launch integratio­n tower, which SpaceX CEO Elon Musk refers to as “Mechazilla.”

NASA has a vested interest in Starship becoming operationa­l, as a version of it is slated to act as the human landing system for the Artemis III mission, which is slated for as early as September 2026. It aims to return humans, including the first woman, to the lunar surface for the first time since the end of the Apollo missions in 1972.

Its completion is also eagerly awaited by the Department of Defense, which is interested in its massive upgrade in cargo capacity over existing rockets.

SpaceX’s big plans for what it expects to be hundreds and then thousands of Starship launches a year are to send up larger versions of its Starlink satellites, several human spacefligh­ts, and eventually send up hardware to allow for settlement of Mars.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? A plume forms as SpaceX’s Starship separates from its booster during a test flight in Boca Chica, Texas, on Nov. 18.
ERIC GAY/AP A plume forms as SpaceX’s Starship separates from its booster during a test flight in Boca Chica, Texas, on Nov. 18.

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