The launch of a 400-foot-tall (122 meters) rocket won’t seem like a novelty for much longer.
SpaceX‘s giant Starship vehicle lifted off for the third time ever today (March 14) on an ambitious test flight that energized space fans around the world.
Starship didn’t achieve all of its goals today; both its first-stage booster, known as Super Heavy, and its upper-stage spacecraft were lost as they came back to Earth, for example. But the megarocket flew faster, farther and longer than it had before, cheering the company and NASA, whose Artemis program will use Starship to land astronauts on the moon.
“Congrats to @SpaceX on a successful test flight! Starship has soared into the heavens. Together, we are making great strides through Artemis to return humanity to the moon — then look onward to Mars,” NASA chief Bill Nelson said via X today.
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Starship’s first crewed moon landing for NASA is scheduled to take place in September 2026, on the agency’s Artemis 3 mission. Getting Starship up and running in time to meet that deadline will require a lot of work — and SpaceX has rolled up its sleeves.
The company has already built four more Starships at its Starbase facility in South Texas, which hosted today’s launch.
“These vehicles are slated for future flight tests just like today’s,” Siva Bharadvaj, a space operations engineer at SpaceX, said during a webcast of today’s launch.
“And, in fact, just this week, we static-fired our next ship that’s planning to fly and expect to test the booster as soon as the launch mount is free from today’s flight test,” he added.
SpaceX will aim to get these and future vehicles aloft as quickly as possible, in keeping with the company’s “build, fly and iterate” philosophy. Indeed, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk said this week that the company hopes to launch at least six Starship missions in 2024.
Musk is known for his aggressive timelines, but that one may well be achievable. Seven months elapsed between the first Starship test flight, in April 2023, and the second, which occurred this past November. The gap between flight two and today’s launch was just four months, so things are moving in the right direction.
And the turnaround for flight four should be shorter still, given the milestones notched on today’s mission. For instance, Super Heavy performed a successful “boostback burn” after separating from the upper stage, getting itself into position for a splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico (though it did not ace its landing burn).
And the upper stage reached orbital velocity, opened its payload door in space as it will do on operational, satellite-deploying flights, and survived reentry into Earth’s atmosphere for a while. The ship managed to beam home incredible video of its fiery ordeal before going dark about 50 minutes after liftoff. (Starship flights one and two lasted just four minutes and eight minutes, respectively.)
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And Starship’s flight cadence will likely ramp up greatly after it becomes operational. For example, before each moon-landing mission, Starship will need to top up its tanks at a propellant depot in Earth orbit.
It will take multiple Starship “tanker” missions to fill this depot. How many is a matter of debate, due partly to the uncertainty about how much of the supercold propellant will “boil off.” Musk has pegged the number of tanker flights per Starship lunar landing at four to eight, whereas NASA officials have said it could be “in the high teens.” No matter what the final number turns out to be, that’s a lot of Starship launches.
SpaceX also plans to use Starship to help humanity settle Mars, as Musk has repeatedly stressed (including in the aftermath of today’s flight). Setting up a sustainable city on the Red Planet would require a staggering number of launches, even though Starship is the most powerful rocket ever built. (In its final form, Starship will be capable of hauling up to 275 tons to Earth orbit, Bharadvaj said during today’s webcast.)
To give you an idea: A few years back, Musk laid out a plan that involved launching fleets of 1,000 Starships to the Red Planet every 26 months, the recurring window when Earth and Mars align properly for interplanetary missions.
That may be overly ambitious or, if achievable, a nod to a far-off future. But it’s safe to assume that we’ll have plenty more chances to watch the fledgling Starship fly over the coming months.