SpaceX has pulled off a successful test
flight of its newest generation rocket Starship,
reversing a trend of disappointing failures. The
world's largest and most powerful rocket blasted
off from Texas just after 18:30 local time, for a
60-minute flight. Parts of the engine appeared to
explode at one stage, and flaps on the side of the
rocket caught fire and swung from side to side.
The US space agency Nasa plans to use Starship
to send humans to the Moon for its Artemis
programme in 2027.
"Great work by the SpaceX team!!",
posted SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on X, who is
spending billions on developing Starship, with
each launch costing an estimated $100m. He will
be welcoming the success after three Starship
launches ended in failure this year, and one
rocket exploded on its test stand in June. Starship
is the largest and most powerful rocket built to
date, made up of a booster called Super Heavy
and the spacecraft Starship.
The signs were positive from the start of
Tuesday's test flight. All of the booster's 33
engines fired up, and after about seven minutes,
the booster separated from the spacecraft and fell
into the Gulf of Mexico. Starship continued to
ascend, reaching a maximum height of almost
200 km above Earth before coasting around the
planet. SpaceX said it intended to put the rocket
under stress to test its limits, and parts of the
rocket's flaps appeared to burn and swing wildly
during the descent. The company has designed
Starship to one day be a fully reusable transport
system capable of carrying people to the Moon
and Mars.
BBC News. “SpaceX pulls off Starship rocket launch in muchneeded comeback.” 27 August 2025.
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