This web page was created programmatically, to learn the article in its unique location you may go to the hyperlink bellow:
https://www.space.com/space-exploration/launches-spacecraft/space-starship-flight-11-launch-webcast
and if you wish to take away this text from our website please contact us
SpaceX plans to launch Flight 11 of its Starship megarocket on Monday night (Oct. 13), and you’ll watch the motion stay.
Starship, the most important and strongest rocket ever constructed, is scheduled to carry off for the eleventh time on Monday (Oct. 13), throughout a 75-minute window that opens at 7:15 p.m. EDT (2315 GMT).
The launch will happen from SpaceX‘s Starbase website in South Texas. You can watch it stay right here at Space.com courtesy of the corporate; protection will start about half-hour earlier than liftoff.
Starship consists of a first-stage booster known as Super Heavy and an upper-stage spacecraft often called Starship, or Ship for brief. Both of those parts are designed to be absolutely and quickly reusable.
SpaceX believes that the car’s unprecedented mixture of energy and reusability will enable humanity to settle Mars, a long-held dream of company founder and CEO Elon Musk.
Starship Flight 11 will look a lot like Flight 10, if all goes according to plan. On that most recent launch, which took place on Aug. 26, Super Heavy steered itself to a splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico about 6.5 minutes after liftoff, and Ship did that same in the Indian Ocean roughly an hour later.
Ship also managed to relight one of its Raptor engines in space and deploy some payloads — eight dummy versions of SpaceX’s Starlink broadband satellites.
Those will be the main goals for Flight 11 as well. SpaceX also plans to test a new landing burn engine configuration for Super Heavy and gather data that will help pave the way for Ship to end its missions with a return to Starbase, where it will be caught by the launch tower’s “chopstick” arms.
Super Heavy has already done this on three previous Starship test flights. In fact, the booster flying on Monday is a spaceflight veteran, having conducted Starship Flight 8 earlier this year.
“For reentry, tiles have been removed from Starship to intentionally stress-test vulnerable areas across the vehicle,” SpaceX wrote in a Flight 11 mission description.
“Several of the missing tiles are in areas where tiles are bonded to the vehicle and do not have a backup ablative layer,” the corporate added. “To mimic the path a ship will take on future flights returning to Starbase, the final phase of Starship’s trajectory on Flight 11 includes a dynamic banking maneuver and will test subsonic guidance algorithms prior to a landing burn and splashdown in the Indian Ocean.”
This web page was created programmatically, to learn the article in its unique location you may go to the hyperlink bellow:
https://www.space.com/space-exploration/launches-spacecraft/space-starship-flight-11-launch-webcast
and if you wish to take away this text from our website please contact us
