Tag: Space x

  • Blue Origin Rocket Explodes On Launchpad In A Setback For Bid To Catch Musk’s SpaceX

    Blue Origin Rocket Explodes On Launchpad In A Setback For Bid To Catch Musk’s SpaceX

    Summary

    • Blue Origin confirms ‘anomaly’ during hot-fire test
    • Bezos-owned company says all personnel accounted for, investigation underway
    • NASA to assess impacts on Artemis and Moon Base programs
    • Bezos and Musk comment on setback, highlight challenges in heavy-lift rocket development

    May 28 (Reuters) – An uncrewed Blue Origin ​New Glenn rocket exploded on a Florida launchpad during a test on Thursday, in a major setback for Jeff Bezos’ space ‌venture as it seeks to narrow the gap with Elon Musk’s IPO-bound SpaceX.

    Video posted by NASASpaceflight, which livestreams launches from Florida, showed the towering New Glenn rocket igniting on the pad at about 2100 ET (0100 GMT on Friday) before erupting into a massive fireball that billowed skyward, sending a towering plume of flames and smoke into the air.

    Blue Origin ​was preparing the rocket for its fourth launch, which was due to deliver 48 Amazon Leo satellites into low-Earth orbit, part of efforts ​to build a broadband constellation to rival Musk’s Starlink network. Amazon Leo satellites were not integrated on the rocket ⁠at the time of the incident, a source familiar with the matter said, asking not to be named due to its sensitivity.

    The explosion marks the ​latest setback for the long-delayed New Glenn, which is supposed to play a central role in delivering lunar landers and cargo under NASA’s Artemis lunar exploration ​missions.

    It comes just two days after NASA awarded Blue Origin a $188 million contract to land rovers on the moon’s surface, and less than a week after SpaceX – years ahead in development – carried out a largely successful test of its next-generation Starship rocket.

    Blue Origin confirmed it had experienced an “anomaly” during a hot-fire test, where a rocket engine is fired up ​while anchored to the ground.

    “Very rough day, but we’ll rebuild whatever needs rebuilding and get back to flying. It’s worth it,” Bezos said in a ​post on X, adding that it was too early to know the root cause.

    NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said the agency would work with Blue Origin to support an investigation ‌of the ⁠incident.

    “Spaceflight is unforgiving, and developing new heavy-lift launch capability is extraordinarily difficult,” Isaacman said on X.

    Isaacman also added that NASA would provide information on any impacts to its Artemis and Moon Base programs.

    ‘ROCKETS ARE HARD’

    Musk’s SpaceX and Bezos’ Blue Origin, in the latest competition between the billionaire-run companies, have been racing to help return people to the moon ahead of a planned crewed mission by China in 2030 by designing the lunar landers NASA will use.

    SpaceX, which unveiled its ​plans for an IPO earlier this month and ​is set to become the ⁠first trillion-dollar U.S. market debut, has also faced setbacks with its rockets

    In June last year, its massive Starship spacecraft exploded in a similarly dramatic fireball during testing in Texas while preparing for a test flight.

    SpaceX was partly successful in its 12th ​test flight of a Starship prototype last week after it deployed a clutch of mock satellites and executed ​a controlled splashdown of ⁠the spacecraft in the Indian Ocean. But the Musk-owned company failed to achieve a controlled landing of the Super Heavy booster, which tumbled into the Gulf of Mexico.

    Musk responded on X to a video of the Blue Origin explosion, saying, “Most unfortunate. Rockets are hard.”

    Blue Origin has spent billions of dollars and roughly a decade ⁠developing New ​Glenn, a rocket 29-stories high with a reusable first stage meant to compete with SpaceX’s ​Falcon fleet and its more powerful Starship.

    The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said it was aware of the incident, but added that it was outside its scope and did not impact air traffic ​in the region.

  • Apple’s iPhones To Support Starlink Direct-to-Cell Coverage In US

    Apple’s iPhones To Support Starlink Direct-to-Cell Coverage In US

    Apple’s  iPhone devices are now eligible to test SpaceX-owned Starlink’s direct-to-cell capability that provides coverage from space, according to T-Mobile, a partner in the program.
    T-Mobile and Elon Musk’s SpaceX are currently testing the Starlink cell network on a trial basis after receiving approval from the Federal Communications Commission in November last year.

    The trial offers ‘text via satellite’, while voice and data features will be added in the future, according to the T-Mobile website.

    T-Mobile initially only listed a few Android smartphones as eligible devices to test the network, but has now added iPhone devices with the latest iOS 18.3 software update.

    Bloomberg News first reported on Tuesday that Apple, SpaceX and T-Mobile had been secretively working to add support for the network in its latest iPhone software.

    Apple and SpaceX did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment outside regular business hours.

    In October last year, the FCC had allowed SpaceX and T-Mobile to enable Starlink satellites with direct-to-cell capability to provide coverage for cellphones in areas of North Carolina hit hard by Hurricane Helene.
    (Reuters)
  • What Elon Musk Could Gain From A Trump Presidency

    What Elon Musk Could Gain From A Trump Presidency

    Donald Trump’s return to the White House might also prove to be a win for one of his most visible supporters: Elon Musk.

    The world’s richest man spent election night in Florida with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort as returns came in.

    “The people of America gave Donald Trump a crystal-clear mandate for change tonight,” Musk wrote on the social media platform X as Trump’s victory began to appear all but certain.

    At his victory speech at the Palm Beach Convention Center, Trump spent several minutes praising Musk and recounting the successful landing of a rocket manufactured by one of Musk’s companies, SpaceX.

    Musk threw his support behind the Republican almost immediately after the assassination attempt on Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania in July.

    As one of the president-elect’s most important backers, the tech billionaire donated more than Ksh15.3 billion to fund a Super PAC aimed at re-electing Trump.

    He also spent the last weeks before election day running a get-out-the-vote effort in the battleground states, which included a daily giveaway of Ksh129 million to voters in those states. The giveaway became the subject of a legal challenge, though a judge later ruled they could go ahead.

    After throwing his name, money, and platform behind Trump, Musk has plenty to gain from Trump’s re-election.

    The president-elect has said that in a second term, he would invite Musk into his administration to eliminate government waste.

    Musk has referred to the potential effort as the “Department of Government Efficiency,” or DOGE, the name of a meme and cryptocurrency that he has popularized.

    Space X

    The businessman could also benefit from Trump’s presidency through his ownership of SpaceX, which already dominates the business of sending government satellites to space.

    With a close ally in the White House, Musk could seek to further capitalise on those government ties.

    Musk has criticised rivals including Boeing for the structure of their government contracts, which he says disincentive to finishing projects on budget and on time.

    SpaceX has also moved into building spy satellites just as the Pentagon and American spy agencies appear poised to invest billions of dollars into them.

    Musk’s electric vehicle maker Tesla could meanwhile reap gains from an administration that Trump has said would be defined by “the lowest regulatory burden.”

    Just last month, the US agency in charge of regulating road safety revealed it was probing Tesla’s self-driving software systems.

    Musk has also come under fire for allegedly seeking to block Tesla workers from unionising. The United Auto Workers filed unfair labour practice charges against both Trump and Musk after the two talked about Musk supposedly firing striking workers during a conversation on X.

    Trump has also pledged to lower taxes on corporations and the wealthy.

    That’s another promise Musk is likely hoping he will keep.

  • Elon Musk’s Space X Launches 60 More Starlink Satellites

    Elon Musk’s Space X Launches 60 More Starlink Satellites

    Space X, a private space company that is owned by American billionaire Elon Musk has added 60 more satellites to its goal of nearly 45,000 for a global internet network called Starlink.

    Soace X what to have internet connectivity everywhere on earth. In May this year, the company launched 60 satellites that are in orbit right now and 60 more were launched to space from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on Monday.

    The second Starlink deployment from SpaceX’s Flacon 9 rocket (a 1.2 million-pound spacecraft) was a success.

    SpaceX plans to launch monthly Starlink missions in 2020. Just last month, SpaceX applied for 30,000 more satellites, which you can add onto the 12,000 the U.S. Federal Communications Commission already approved.

    Once the entire constellation is in low Earth orbit by 2027, or possibly later, it’s expected to offer high-speed internet to anywhere on Earth. Last month SpaceX CEO Elon Musk supposedly sent a tweet using the Starlink network.

    When the company launched its first set of Starlink internet satellites in May, professional astronomers worried that the super bright satellites would interfere with scientific observations and amateur appreciation of the stars.

    “That first few nights, it was like, ‘Holy shit, the stars were super bright. That is a wake up call” Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, told Space.com.

    https://twitter.com/alexwitze/status/1193890882740609025?s=19

    Here is a YouTube courtesy video.

    SpaceX and its leader, Elon Musk, reassured astronomers that once the satellites settled into place, they would stop masquerading as the stars they are named for.