
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A towering first-stage booster for an upgraded version of SpaceX's Starship rocket suffered a predawn testing failure in Texas on Friday, potentially complicating the company's push to prove the rocket's moon-landing abilities for NASA, according to observers who captured it on video.
Elon Musk's SpaceX had rolled the stainless steel booster out to a testing pad on Thursday at the company's Starbase rocket facilities, saying it intended to test its redesigned propellant systems and structural strength.
During a test on the pad around 4 a.m. CT Friday, a zoomed-in live video feed from SpaceX-watching group LabPadre showed the booster suddenly buckle and release a cloud of gas from its sides, indicating a possible explosion under pressure had blown open its exterior.
SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the mishap.
The company has faced pressure from NASA to advance its whirlwind Starship development program to a new phase of tests involving features related to the rocket's future moon landings, a multibillion-dollar pair of missions for the U.S. space agency that would put the first humans on the lunar surface since 1972.
The mission has made Starship a central component of the U.S. moon program, which is increasingly pressed to achieve a landing before China does around 2030. NASA's acting and prospective leadership camps have tussled over how best to return humans to the moon while China's space program advances.
The booster that suffered the mishap on Friday was the first of Starship V3, an iteration of the rocket that SpaceX has said packs an array of new designs and features related to the moon program.
SpaceX is known for speedy production of multiple booster iterations as part of its capital-intensive test-to-failure ethos of rocket development. But it was unclear whether it has another V3 booster it could resume tests with, or by how many months the mishap could set back the Starship program.
NASA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Starbase, the sprawling SpaceX Starship facilities in south Texas, has had multiple testing explosions in the past. A Starship booster exploded in a giant fireball on its testing pad in June, sending debris across the U.S.-Mexico border two miles away and sparking political tension with the country's president.
(Reporting by Joey RouletteEditing by Bill Berkrot)
latest_posts
- 1
German Court Rejects Bid To Force BMW and Mercedes-Benz To Stop Selling New Combustion-Engine Cars After 2030 - 2
7 Heavenly Espressos, One Do You Like? - 3
Figure out How to Streamline Eco-friendliness in Your Volvo XC40 - 4
Sound Propensities: 20 Methods for helping Your Insusceptible Framework - 5
‘Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber’ tour — How to get tickets, presale times, concert dates and more
Renewables cover over 50% of German electricity consumption in Q1
Former ‘Dancing with the Stars’ Pro Survives Plane Crash at LaGuardia That Left 2 Pilots Dead
Partake in the Outside: Senior-Accommodating Exercises for 2024
Impact of NIH funding reductions felt in cancer and infectious disease trials
Bestselling author Colleen Hoover reveals cancer journey
Vote in favor of the subject that you see as generally captivating and intelligent!
Michael Jordan donates $10M to North Carolina medical center in honor of his mother
10 Activities to Lift Your Consume and Bust Your Stomach
Vote In favor of Your Number one Kind Of Food Conveyance Administration













