Putting the Latest Starship Crash Into Perspective
upstart writes in with an IRC submission:
Putting the latest Starship crash into perspective:
Once again, on Tuesday afternoon, a Starship prototype soared into the clear skies above South Texas like something out of the pages of a science fiction novel. Once again, after reaching a high altitude, the spaceship leaned into a "belly flop" maneuver, making a controlled descent back toward the planet.
And then, once again, a problem within the last few seconds caused the Starship prototype to spectacularly crash near its launch platform.
Seven weeks have passed since the first full-scale Starship prototype, SN8, performed its high-altitude flight. Now, SN9 has met a similar fate. It appeared that one of the two Raptor rocket engines intended to power the final, controlled descent failed to relight (see a great, slow-motion view). As a result, when the vehicle began reorienting itself into a vertical position, it never stopped swinging. Then, BOOM!
So what are we to make of a second high-profile failure of the Starship program? Is this a program on the cusp of failure?
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