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Elon Musk proudly proclaimed 'Starship will take humanity to Mars' after the massive rocket hit a major milestone of reaching orbit during a Thursday flight test.
While venturing into space was part of the mission, the event ended in tragedy when the rocket was 'lost' while reentering the atmosphere - leading some to question if Starship is even capable of reaching the Red Planet without exploding.
The mishap marks the third $3 billion Starship to be loss during tests flights in less than one year - and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has opened investigation to determine what went wrong.
The two-stage craft, consisting of the Starship cruise vessel mounted atop its towering Super Heavy rocket booster, took off from SpaceX's Boca Chica, Texas, flight test facility on the Gulf Coast at 9:25am ET.
But SpaceX revealed around 10:35am ET that the world's most powerful rocket had been lost.
'The team has made the call that the ship has been lost, so no splashdown today,' said Dan Huot, SpaceX communications manager, during the live broadcast.
'But again, just it's incredible to see how much further we got this time around.'
SpaceX's mission plan did not include recovering the rocket from the Indian Ocean after splashdown, but Starship breaking up in the atmosphere was unexpected.
While venturing into space was part of the mission, the event ended in tragedy when the rocket was 'lost' while reentering the atmosphere - leading some to question if Starship is even capable of reaching Mars without exploding
The two-stage Starship, taller than the Statue of Liberty, achieved liftoff from SpaceX 's Boca Chica, Texas , flight test facility on the Gulf Coast at 9:25am ET
The upper Starship stage reached an altitude of about 145 miles above the surface and topped speeds of around 15,000 miles per hour as it soared into orbit, capturing stunning views of space and the curvature of Earth
But SpaceX revealed around 10:35am ET that the world's most powerful rocket was destroyed during atmospheric re-entry and is missing. Pictured is the craft moments before it was lost
In 2020, Musk revealed his plan for Starship to send humans to Mars.
He calculated that to put one million humans on the Red Planet by 2025, his rockets would need to conducted around three flights a day and a total of 1,000 flights a year - but 2025 is just around the corner.
The billionaire previously renewed his vow to colonize the Martian world in a post on X last month.
''I'm going to colonize Mars. My mission in life is to make mankind multiplanetary civilization,' the post read.
Musk's reposted the message from his personal account with the accompanying words: 'Only if civilization lasts long enough.'
While Thursday's mission did not end as planned, the test flight was the farthest performed with a Starship rocket.
The most powerful and largest launch vehicle ever constructed, Starship achieved one key first goal: successful separation from its Super Heavy booster.
SpaceX's operating officer, Gwynne Shotwell, congratulated teh team on X following the launch
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson also applauded Musk's company
SpaceX staff watched the mission from a control room in Texas. Many were seen covering their faces as they followed Starship soar into space
Scored to the rapturous cheering of SpaceX mission control, the craft ascended in a gleaming orange fury of fire and smoke: a blast off captured via numerous livestream cameras on and off Starship
While the booster, dubbed Booster 10, feel back to Earth and crashed into the Gulf of Mexico as planned, only a few engines were still firing - and how it impacted the water is unclear.
However, a failed separation is what forced SpaceX to pull the kill switch during its first attempt, which saw Starship explode mid-air.
With the loss of the booster, all eyes were on Starship while it hung in the blackness of space preparing for a splashdown in the Indian Ocean.
As the massive rocket reentered the atmosphere, a 'plasma blanket' of heated flowed around its stainless-steel exterior.
On the SpaceX live feed, viewers witnessed a pink-fuchsia plasma of heated air develop around Starship as heat-friction escalated during the craft's descent.
Typically, this 'plasma blanket' effect has acted as a barrier to transmissions between Starship and Musk's Starlink satellites, which relay live video, telemetry data and other key signals to Earth.
But for several stunning moments — intermittently fuzzed by digital static — the live feed offered up images of a glowing halo around the craft akin to aurora borealis, or 'the northern lights.'
More than two million people tuned into the live stream to watch the craft's own perspective as it blazed past Earth's upper atmosphere into the historic orbital phase of its mission
The coastline of the Gulf of Mexico was filled with people who watched SpaceX's historic mission
Starship 'Ship 28' itself had been designed to return from space by coasting in a drag-heavy 'belly-flop' through the atmosphere, using air friction to reduce its speed, before reorienting into a vertical 'dive' position for a safe plunge in the Indian Ocean.
The grounds team was set to ignite Starship's engines after the rocket coasted back to Earth for 30 minutes, but it was later revealed they chose not to at the last second - the reason for the decision is unknow.
Data sharing was unexpectedly halted a after the world saw views of the glowing pink plasm engulfing the craft.
A few minutes later, SpaceX confirmed that the spacecraft had been lost, presumably either burning up or coming apart during re-entry or crashing into the sea.
While Starship was lost, SpaceX and fellow space enthusiasts are celebrating the mission as a success.
On the SpaceX live feed, viewers witnessed a pink-fuchsia plasma of heated air develop around Starship as heat-friction escalated during the craft's descent
Typically, this 'plasma blanket' effect has acted as a barrier to transmissions between Starship and Musk's Starlink satellites, which relay live video, telemetry data and other key signals to Earth. But for several stunning moments, the feed offered up a glowing halo around the craft
In-person spectators have watched live all morning through the foggy haze near SpaceX 's coastline Texas facility, some (pictured above) tailgating since the more sunny conditions on Wednesday near SpaceX's Boca Chica, Texas, flight test facility along the Gulf
SpaceX's operating officer, Gwynne Shotwell, posted on X: 'HUGE congratulations to the entire team for this incredible day: clean count (glad the shrimpers could get out in the nick of time!), liftoff, hot staging, Super Heavy boost back and coast (and likely a couple engines making mainstage during landing burn!), clean ship 'insertion' and coast, payload door cycling and prop transfer demo (to be confirmed!), and ship entry!'
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson also shared his congratulations on X.
'Congrats to @SpaceXon a successful test flight! Starship has soared into the heavens. Together, we are making great strides through Artemis to return humanity to the Moon—then look onward to Mars,' reads the post.
Early in the test, all 33 of the booster's Raptor FFSC engines could be seen gleaming successfully in their hot stage burn, fully functioning as the craft rocketed into orbit
In-person spectators watched live all morning through the dawn's foggy haze near SpaceX's coastline Texas facility, while the space company's staff appeared to cover their eyes nervously inside mission control during the high stakes launch.
More than two million people tuned into the live stream to watch the craft's own perspective as it blazed past Earth's upper atmosphere into the historic orbital phase of its mission.
The craft's Super Heavy booster had been engineered to land in a fashion similar to SpaceX's smaller Falcon 9 rockets — in the case of today's launch with the goal of achieving a soft splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico.
Reusability means that all of the expensive, painstakingly crafted hardware on the SpaceX craft, including its booster's 33 Raptor full-flow staged combustion cycle (FFSC) engines and Starship's own six Raptors, won't just become ocean litter.
This efficient design hopes to cut down the cost of launching payloads into orbit, hitting a price of about $10 million to take 100 tons of material — and one-day NASA personnel — into space, to the moon and, if all goes well, Mars.
Early in the test, all 33 of the booster's Raptor FFSC engines could be seen gleaming successfully in their hot stage burn, fully functioning as the craft rocketed into orbit.
Above, Starship's Super Heavy booster as it began its planned separation from the craft. The booster has been engineered to land in a fashion similar to SpaceX's smaller Falcon 9 rockets
But the feed cut out before the that booster, 'Booster 10,' could make its planned splashdown into the Gulf of Mexico, leaving that reusable rocket's fate unclear
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) cleared SpaceX for its third Starship flight on Wednesday morning.
'The FAA determined SpaceX met all safety, environmental, policy and financial responsibility requirements,' the agency said in a statement.
The FAA's 'tiered environmental assessment' focused on the environmental impact of Starship's reentry and water landing in the Indian Ocean.
SpaceX says it has 'significantly expanded' Starship's fire suppression systems and improved the autonomous systems that should have triggered the destruct command sooner during the rocket's previous launch failures.
Starship's first and failed test flight on April 20, 2023 — written as 4/20 in America, an internet meme and a reference to cannabis culture Musk enjoys alluding to — saw the rocket explode just 25 miles into the sky after its booster failed to detach.
Today's Starship launch during its successful early phases
The craft's reusability means that all of the space-faring vessel's expensive, painstakingly crafted hardware, including the booster's 33 Raptor full-flow staged combustion cycle engines and Starship's own six Raptor engines, won't just become wasted ocean litter
Although it's unclear what Starship's targeted altitude is, today's flight aims to reach the sort of speeds needed to get a vehicle into orbit: approximately 17,500 miles per hour. Ahead of the launch, Musk posted to his X platform: 'Starship launch attempt in ~5 hours. Let's get to Mars'
SpaceX's Starship and its unique, reusable Super Heavy booster (above) as fueling began Thursday of the rocket's cryogenically cold, pressurized methane and liquid oxygen fuel
Starship (above, Thursday), shrouded in a drifting bank of fog, began its launch window at 8am Eastern (1200 GMT). The FAA cleared SpaceX for its third Starship flight on Wednesday, saying it 'met all safety, environmental, policy and financial responsibility requirements'
Elon Musk's next-gen Starship (seen above on the launchpad Wednesday) launched Thursday morning; the 400-foot tall, reusable rocket achieved major milestones in its third orbital test
SpaceX was forced to manually kill that first test flight four minutes in, as the rocket began spinning dangerously out of control.
It crashed in the Gulf of Mexico, throwing up a dust cloud over a town several miles away.
Outside of the FAA's recommendations, SpaceX also stated that it has added a 'hot stage' separation system linking Starship to the Super Heavy Booster, and reinforced the launchpad with flame deflectors.
Starship is key to SpaceX's future of providing reusable, affordable space transportation.
Unlike the Saturn V rocket which took astronauts to the moon, the SpaceX version — boosters and all — is designed to be completely reusable after returning to Earth in an effort to reduce costs.
NASA is banking on Musk's firm coming through with rockets that will help it get humans to the moon and someday Mars ahead of China in the modern day space race. The clock is ticking for a modified Starship to be ready for a planned lunar landing in 2025.
Alongside NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) it will ferry astronauts to the moon, so long as all things go to plan.
SpaceX itself is already heavily involved in the astro business, sending supplies and crew to the International Space Station and bringing astronauts back to Earth.