HomeAUSpaceX's Colossal Starship Megarocket: A New Era in Space Exploration Takes Flight

SpaceX’s Colossal Starship Megarocket: A New Era in Space Exploration Takes Flight

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IN BRIEF

  • Elon Musk’s SpaceX has launched its most powerful Starship rocket yet.
  • The latest version may be used by NASA to land astronauts on the moon.

SpaceX has successfully launched its most formidable Starship yet, a cutting-edge iteration that NASA plans to use for the upcoming moon missions.

This updated mega rocket made its grand entrance just two days following SpaceX CEO Elon Musk’s announcement of the company’s move to go public, potentially setting records with its initial public offering.

Taking off from the southernmost point of Texas, the rocket embarked on its journey, carrying 20 mock Starlink satellites intended for deployment halfway across the globe.

The colossal rocket soared into space shortly after 5:30 PM local time and concluded its mission by splashing down into the Indian Ocean on Friday.

This marks the 12th test flight of the rocket, a pivotal development as Musk envisions it as the vehicle to eventually carry humans to Mars. Prior to that vision, it will play a crucial role in NASA’s Artemis program aimed at lunar exploration.

The last of the old space-skimming Starships lifted off in October. SpaceX’s third-generation Starship — a souped-up version dubbed V3 — soared from a brand-new launch pad at Starbase, near the Mexican border.

Last-minute pad issues had thwarted Thursday evening’s launch attempt.

SpaceX was hoping to avoid the fireworks it experienced during back-to-back launches in 2025 when midair explosions rained wreckage down on the Atlantic. Earlier flights also ended in flames.

At 124 metres, the latest model eclipses the older Starship lines by more than a metre and packs more engine thrust.

The revamped booster sports fewer but bigger and stronger grid fins for steering it back to earth following liftoff, and a larger and more robust fuel transfer line to feed the 33 main engines.

The retro-looking, stainless steel spacecraft also has more of everything — more cameras and more navigation and computer power — as well as docking cones for future rendezvous and moon missions.

Starship is meant to be fully reusable, with giant mechanical arms at the launch pads to catch the returning rocket stages. But on this latest trial run, nothing was being recovered.

‘Billions of dollars’

NASA is paying SpaceX — and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin — billions of dollars to provide the lunar landers that will be used to land Artemis astronauts on the moon.

The two companies are scrambling to be first.

While Starship has reached the fringes of space on multiple flights lasting an hour at most, Bezos’ Blue Moon has yet to lift off, although a prototype is being readied for a moonshot later in 2026.

NASA is following April’s successful lunar flyaround by four astronauts with a docking trial run in orbit around earth planned for 2027.

For that Artemis III mission, astronauts will practice docking their Orion capsule with Starship, Blue Moon or both.

A moon landing by two astronauts — Artemis IV— could follow as soon as 2028 using either Starship or Blue Moon, whichever lander is safer and ready first.

It will be NASA’s first lunar landing with a crew since 1972’s Apollo 17. The goal this time is a moon base near the lunar south pole, staffed by astronauts as well as robots.

“We’re looking forward to seeing this fly, because hopefully at some point in the not-too-distant future we’re going to join up in Earth orbit,” NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said during the pre-launch SpaceX program ahead of Friday’s test.

Following the test, Isaacman posted praise on X, congratulating SpaceX on “a hell of a V3 Starship launch.”

“One step closer to the Moon…one step closer to Mars,” the NASA official said.

SpaceX is already taking reservations for private flights to the moon and Mars on Starship, though the timing is uncertain.


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