SpaceX Makes the History Books Again After Catching ‘Super Heavy’ Rocket
There’s no question that SpaceX has been in the frontier of privatized space exploration and recently the company achieved another engineering first. This video was captured from a landing pad in Texas and this was the moment the massive first stage rocket from a Starship test launch was caught by the giant arms of the docking tower.
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00:00There's no question that SpaceX has been in the frontier of privatized space exploration
00:08and recently the company achieved another engineering first.
00:12This video was captured from a landing pad in Texas and this was the moment the massive
00:16first stage rocket from a Starship test launch was captured by the giant arms of the docking
00:20tower.
00:21The super heavy first stage rocket measures some two hundred and thirty three feet from
00:25end to end and while you've no doubt seen the company's Falcon 9 rocket land on its
00:29own previously, for the super heavy they've opted to go with a mechanized catching arm
00:33system as they wanted to maximize the booster's payload capability and landing legs would
00:37increase its weight substantially.
00:39This successful test flight of both the super heavy booster and SpaceX's Starship follows
00:44several failed attempts in recent years.
00:46However there is a lot on the line with several missions already on the books and scheduled
00:50with NASA.
00:51Of course a couple of those are the Artemis 1 and 2 missions to the moon where astronauts
00:55will first board a modified Starship for a flyby before another one will take humans
00:59there and eventually land on the lunar surface.
01:02According to NASA, the first of those missions could be underway as early as 2026.