SpaceX Celebrates 200th Successful Booster Landing | Aero-News Network
Aero-News Network
RSS icon RSS feed
podcast icon MP3 podcast
Subscribe Aero-News e-mail Newsletter Subscribe

Airborne Unlimited -- Most Recent Daily Episodes

Episode Date

Airborne-Monday

Airborne-Tuesday

Airborne-Wednesday Airborne-Thursday

Airborne-Friday

Airborne On YouTube

Airborne-Unlimited-05.06.24

Airborne-NextGen-04.30.24

Airborne-Unlimited-05.01.24 Airborne-AffordableFlyers--05.02.24

Airborne-Unlimited-05.03.24

Fri, Jun 16, 2023

SpaceX Celebrates 200th Successful Booster Landing

There and Back Again: a Booster’s Tale

On Monday, 12 June 2023, Space Exploration Technologies Corporation—colloquially, SpaceX—landed its 200th rocket-booster. The milestone achievement occurred just eight-minutes after the 14:35 PDT launch of the company’s Transporter-8 rideshare mission from Space Launch Complex 4E at California’s Vandenberg Space Force Base (VSFB).

Borne aloft by a SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket, the mission delivered 72 payloads ranging in size from picosatellites massing less than one-kilogram to orbital platforms massing several hundred kilograms into Sun-Synchronous Orbits (SSO) of approximately 525-kilometer altitudes and 97.5-degree inclinations.

Certainly the strangest payload delivered to orbit by the Transporter-8 mission was a small satellite sponsored by the Vatican. Dubbed Spei Satelles—Latin for satellites of hope—the breadbox-sized contraption contained a chip engraved with a speech delivered by Pope Francis during the COVID-19 exigency.

Transporter-8 marked a turning-point in Falcon-9 rideshare missions insomuch as it was the first such endeavor to utilize SpaceX’s modular Rideshare Plates to accommodate the aforementioned payloads.

Transporter-8 occasioned 2023’s 40th Falcon mission and followed the launch of a gaggle of Starlink satellites earlier in the day from Space Launch Complex 40 at Florida’s Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS).

The Transporter missions are intended to provide a consistent cadence of rideshare opportunities to popular orbits—such as SSO. Currently, one additional Transporter mission is slated for 2023.

While some Transporter customers arrange space-launch services for their payloads by dealing directly with SpaceX, most payloads are booked through launch integrators—entities that purchase capacity on a given mission’s payload stack, then assemble multiple customers into subject capacity. Thereafter, the payloads deploy either directly from the launch adapter or onboard a separable deployer or space tug by which they’re released at a later time.

The record-setting 200th booster landed at SpaceX’s Landing Zone (LZ) 4 in Lompoc, California at 14:42 PDT. The occurrence marked the space-launch concern’s 126th consecutive successful booster landing and evinced the maturation of myriad fiddly technologies.

In 2015, the first successful landing of a SpaceX booster dazzled the world. The feat evoked memories of classic science-fiction properties the likes of Flash Gordon and the 1959 Twilight Zone episode titled The Lonely, in which a convict serving out fifty-years of solitary confinement on a habitable asteroid is visited by police come calling in a majestic rocket that descends and touches-down vertically.

In the years since, SpaceX has improved its landing capabilities to such an extent that the vast majority of the sixty-plus boosters the company launched in 2022 were previously flown.  

As a rocket’s first-stage boosters account for upwards of ninety-percent of its overall price-tag, reusability dramatically drives down the cost of space-launches. By reusing boosters, SpaceX has contemporaneously lowered the cost and upped the frequency of safe and reliable space-launches—thereby largely democratizing the formerly oligopolistic commercial space industry.

FMI: www.spacex.com 

Advertisement

More News

ANN's Daily Aero-Linx (05.04.24)

Aero Linx: JAARS Nearly 1.5 billion people, using more than 5,500 languages, do not have a full Bible in their first language. Many of these people live in the most remote parts of>[...]

NTSB Final Report: Quest Aircraft Co Inc Kodiak 100

'Airplane Bounced Twice On The Grass Runway, Resulting In The Nose Wheel Separating From The Airplane...' Analysis: The pilot reported, “upon touchdown, the plane jumped back>[...]

Aero-News: Quote of the Day (05.04.24)

"Burt is best known to the public for his historic designs of SpaceShipOne, Voyager, and GlobalFlyer, but for EAA members and aviation aficionados, his unique concepts began more t>[...]

Aero-News: Quote of the Day (05.05.24)

"Polaris Dawn, the first of the program’s three human spaceflight missions, is targeted to launch to orbit no earlier than summer 2024. During the five-day mission, the crew >[...]

Read/Watch/Listen... ANN Does It All

There Are SO Many Ways To Get YOUR Aero-News! It’s been a while since we have reminded everyone about all the ways we offer your daily dose of aviation news on-the-go...so he>[...]

blog comments powered by Disqus



Advertisement

Advertisement

Podcasts

Advertisement

© 2007 - 2024 Web Development & Design by Pauli Systems, LC