The Starship upper stage — known as Starship, or simply Ship — did a suborbital space cruise for about an hour before ...
SpaceX launched its 400-foot-tall (122 meters) Starship vehicle for the fifth time ever today (Oct. 13), sending the giant ...
Seven minutes after liftoff, SpaceX’s 200-foot-tall, 30-foot-wide Super Heavy rocket ended up right back where it started.
What an incredible view. By Kenneth Chang and Eric Lipton SpaceX pulled off a feat of technical wizardry on Sunday, not only flying a 233-foot rocket booster back to its launch site, but also ...
Seven minutes into the flight test and after separating from the Starship’s vehicle, the rocket booster was successfully ... of the vehicle’s reentry. “Ship landed precisely on target!
SpaceX is targeting Friday, October 18 for a Falcon 9 launch of 23 Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit from Cape Canaveral in Florida.
SpaceX’s Starship had its fifth test launch in 18 months on Sunday morning and successfully caught a component of the rocket with mechanical ... after launching the ship. The Starship ...
Video / AFP A SpaceX Starship rocket successfully landed upright on Sunday (Monday NZT) alongside a massive metal landing tower as it was caught by two converging “chopstick” arms – another ...
The company achieved a major milestone during the fifth test flight of the vehicle, which could carry people to the moon and Mars, landing the rocket ... while giving a free pass to Boeing ...
SpaceX launched its enormous Starship rocket on Sunday on its boldest test flight yet, striving to catch the returning booster back at the pad with mechanical arms. Towering almost 400 feet (121 ...
The perfectly executed landing followed the Starship’s 232-foot Super Heavy booster rocket gracefully returning to the launchpad seven minutes after launch, where it was “caught” by a pair ...
SpaceX successfully launched the latest test flight of Starship Sunday morning, the most powerful rocket system ever constructed, which could one day be used to carry humans to the moon and Mars.