The Guardian (USA)

Elon Musk’s SpaceX Starship rocket blows up minutes after launch

- Oliver Holmes

The largest and most powerful rocket ever built has blasted off from Texas but blew up within minutes in a test flight that its makers, SpaceX, hope will be the first step on a human journey to Mars.

After a cancelled launch earlier this week because of a pressurisa­tion issue, the 120-metre Starship rocket system took off at 8.33am local time (2.33pm in the UK) on Thursday. It gathered speed, but then started to spin at altitude before exploding about four minutes after leaving the ground.

It appeared that the two sections of the rocket system – the booster and cruise vessel – were unable to separate properly after takeoff, possibly causing the spacecraft to fail. It was not immediatel­y clear whether the rocket exploded spontaneou­sly or if the Flight Terminatio­n System was activated – a failsafe that destroys the spacecraft to prevent it from veering too far off course.

SpaceX had previously cautioned that the chances of success were low and that the aim of the test flight was to gather data, regardless of whether the full mission was achieved. Employees at SpaceX cheered even after the rocket disintegra­ted.

“As if the flight test was not exciting enough, Starship experience­d a rapid unschedule­d disassembl­y before stage separation,” SpaceX said in a statement on Twitter, referring to the explosion.

The uncrewed sub-orbital test marked the first “fully stacked” trial in which the Starship cruise vessel – which is designed to eventually carry up to 100 astronauts – was placed on top of the Super Heavy booster rocket, whose 33 Raptor engines provided the immense thrust needed.

Almost as long as three passenger jets, the mammoth spacecraft stands 10 metres taller than the Saturn V rocket that sent humans to the moon in 1969.

Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX, gained the necessary approval last week from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion for the launch to go ahead.

Both the upper and lower segments of the system are designed to power themselves safely back to Earth for a soft landing so that they can be reused. Musk says the reusabilit­y of rockets makes space flight significan­tly cheaper than what Nasa could offer.

Unlike Nasa, which attempts to avoid risk, SpaceX has a record of showing a willingnes­s to have test flights explode, with Musk saying the private venture benefits from understand­ing what goes wrong. SpaceX built its own spaceport, named Starbase, on the Gulf of Mexico in Boca Chica, Texas, to launch its rockets. Several other Starships are already in production for future tests.

Musk said he developed Starship, previously named the BFR (heavily hinted to mean Big Fucking Rocket), so that humans can eventually become an interplane­tary species. To do this, he intends to begin the colonisati­on of Mars, which he said is needed to preserve humanity in case a planet-destroying event, such as nuclear war or an asteroid strike, wipes out life on Earth.

SpaceX claims that Starship, which has a payload capacity of up to 150 tons, will be able to transport dozens of people on long-duration interplane­tary flights. It already has a privately funded trip for 11 people around the moon scheduled for this year, although that timing now appears unrealisti­c. Nasa has also contracted SpaceX to land astronauts, including the first woman, on the moon as soon as 2025 as part of its Artemis programme. That date is also considered overly ambitious.

The company has announced longer-term plans to use the spacecraft as a shuttle for commercial travel on Earth, promising trips from London to Tokyo in under an hour.

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