See Elon Musk’s Starship break up as it lands on Earth, tearing off nearly its entire fin

By | June 7, 2024

  • SpaceX’s Starship flew into space and back, but suffered visible damage as it crashed to Earth.

  • The rocket’s fin began to break off in mid-autumn and the camera lens cracked.

  • Starship’s splashdown was a huge step towards reusability, and Elon Musk claimed victory.

SpaceX’s Starship megarocket scored a major victory Thursday on the road to Elon Musk’s plans to settle Mars — but not without some battle scars.

The rocket ship flew into space for the first time and returned to Earth to splash down in the Indian Ocean with its engines running and communications with mission control intact.

But the spacecraft was visibly falling apart as it screamed through Earth’s atmosphere on SpaceX’s livestream.

SpaceX's starship: Pieces flying off its fin as it re-enters Earth's atmosphere

Starship’s fin began to break off mid-fall.SpaceX

Viewers had a limited view of the ship itself, but the onboard camera was conveniently placed just in front of the fin, which began to break off about halfway back to Earth.

Parts of SpaceX's Starship rocket fly as it re-enters Earth's atmosphereParts of SpaceX's Starship rocket fly as it re-enters Earth's atmosphere

The fin began to shed debris.SpaceX

Soon the spacecraft began spewing so much debris that it caused the camera to blur. According to a SpaceX commentator on the livestream, the lens eventually cracked under extreme conditions.

Foggy view of Spacex starship's fin with holesFoggy view of Spacex starship's fin with holes

The view was cloudy and dark due to all the debris.SpaceX

Still, Starship at least partially accomplished one of its biggest goals for this flight: to practice landing.

SpaceX operators confirmed that Starship turned on its engines as it approached water in an attempt to turn itself upright and make a soft landing.

You can watch this entire challenging process in SpaceX’s live broadcast, starting at 1 hour and 25 minutes:

Musk declared victory by sharing on

Given the damage to the spacecraft and the poor visibility in the camera footage, it was not immediately clear how smooth the landing actually was.

The full extent of the damage to Starship was not immediately clear and may never be, as SpaceX does not plan to recover the ship from the ocean.

Falling back to Earth is extremely intense

In the foreground is the starship's thick metal fin and behind it is a bright purple lightIn the foreground is the starship's thick metal fin and behind it is a bright purple light

A screenshot from SpaceX’s livestream shows the fin at the beginning of Starship’s fall before breaking apart.SpaceX via X

The disintegration was a sight to behold, but not a surprise. This was a test flight, after all, and SpaceX only guaranteed excitement.

Space flight is hard, but the journey back to Earth is pure hell.

A “re-entering” spacecraft is screeching toward Earth at many times the speed of sound — 27,000 mph for Starship, according to SpaceX — hurtling into an increasingly thick atmosphere and creating so much friction that it’s superheated around its belly plasma forms and breaks the spaceship. At temperatures up to 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit.

This plasma also appeared on live broadcast.

starship spacecraft camera view shows bright plasma around its belly and finstarship spacecraft camera view shows bright plasma around its belly and fin

Plasma accumulates around Starship as it moves through the atmosphere in SpaceX’s live broadcast.SpaceX via X

That’s why any spacecraft designed to return to Earth must have a good heat shield. For the Starship, that’s its hub, made up of 18,000 hexagon-shaped ceramic tiles, which Musk hinted is still a work in progress.

“A super-reliable, lightweight, reusable heat shield is the biggest remaining technical challenge for Starship,” Musk said. Wrote In May at X.

black starship rocket stands upright against a supporting launch tower structure with thousands of black tile textures visible on the rocket's surfaceblack starship rocket stands upright against a supporting launch tower structure with thousands of black tile textures visible on the rocket's surface

The Starship’s black belly is actually a large shield made of thousands of heat-resistant tiles.SpaceX via X

He reiterated after Thursday’s flight that the heat shield was the “toughest remaining problem.”

Although this was the launch system’s fourth test flight, it was only Starship’s second trip into space.

For the first time in March, SpaceX declared the vehicle “lost” after communication was lost during landing. This likely means it broke apart or exploded due to the stress of re-entering Earth’s atmosphere.

The Starship-Super Heavy launch system, consisting of a lower stage Super Heavy booster and an upper stage Starship vehicle, promises to be the largest, most powerful and first fully reusable orbital rocket on Earth.

starship super heavy rocket long black on foggy launch pad next to black launch towerstarship super heavy rocket long black on foggy launch pad next to black launch tower

A screenshot from SpaceX’s June 6, 2024 launch livestream shows Starship sitting atop its Super Heavy booster on the launch pad.SpaceX via X

Starship’s landing was a major step towards reusability. The Super Heavy booster also successfully made its first soft water landing after separating from Starship on Thursday.

He started the booster engines and raised himself upright to land in the Gulf of Mexico.

SpaceX's super-heavy rocket crashes into the Gulf of Mexico and splashes water everywhereSpaceX's super-heavy rocket crashes into the Gulf of Mexico and splashes water everywhere

SpaceX has reached a major new milestone by landing its Super Heavy booster in the Gulf of Mexico.SpaceX

Eventually, SpaceX plans to land both stages of the rocket on solid ground to quickly regenerate and fly again another day.

If the Starship-Super Heavy lives up to its hype, it could reduce the cost of spaceflight by a factor of ten, enable high-speed point-to-point transportation on Earth, and yes, even bring the first colonists to Mars.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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