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Elon Musk's quest to make rocket landings routine continues today

SpaceX landed the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on a droneship April 8, 2016 in the Atlantic Ocean off the Florida coast. (Photo courtesy of SpaceX)

UPDATE: SpaceX has postponed the launch until Friday. In a tweet, Elon Musk said there was a glitch within the rocket's upper stage. The company said the rocket and space craft "remain healthy."

 

Looks like a beautiful day for a launch. Sunny, 80 degrees, a slight breeze moving the stratocumulous clouds around just a bit off Florida’s Cape Canaveral. The Air Force says there’s a 90 percent chance for “go” for SpaceX’s launch of a commercial satellite at 5:40 p.m. Thursday.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX is attempting to deliver a commercial communications satellite to orbit. As part of the mission, it will attempt, once again, to land the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on a platform a couple hundred miles off the Florida coast in the Atlantic Ocean. But because the destination for the satellite is a very high orbit, “the first-stage will be subject to extreme velocities and re-entry heating, making a successful landing challenging,” the company said in a statement.

Still, SpaceX stuck the landing the last time under similar conditions. And now in its quest to launch and recover rockets so that they may be used again, SpaceX is acquiring quite a collection of previously used booster stages: Two that landed on platforms at sea, and one that landed on a pad the company has built on the Cape.

Three leaders in commercial space flight, Elon Musk of SpaceX, Jeff Bezos of Blue Origin, and Richard Branson of Virgin Galactic, discuss the path to making commercial spaceflight a reality. (Jhaan Elker/The Washington Post)

Reusing rockets, instead of ditching them in the ocean as had been the norm since the Apollo era, is a key to lower the cost of space travel and making it more accessible to the masses, Musk has said. Meantime, the company continues to practice. And you get to watch the livestream.

“We’ll be successful, ironically, when it becomes boring. When it’s like, ‘Oh, yeah, another landing. No news there,’” Musk said after the first sea landing in April.

In the meantime, the company's hangar is filling up with used boosters.

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SpaceX landed the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on a droneship April 8, 2016 in the Atlantic Ocean off the Florida coast. (Photo courtesy of SpaceX)

UPDATE: SpaceX has postponed the launch until Friday. In a tweet, Elon Musk said there was a glitch within the rocket's upper stage. The company said the rocket and space craft "remain healthy."

 

Looks like a beautiful day for a launch. Sunny, 80 degrees, a slight breeze moving the stratocumulous clouds around just a bit off Florida’s Cape Canaveral. The Air Force says there’s a 90 percent chance for “go” for SpaceX’s launch of a commercial satellite at 5:40 p.m. Thursday.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX is attempting to deliver a commercial communications satellite to orbit. As part of the mission, it will attempt, once again, to land the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on a platform a couple hundred miles off the Florida coast in the Atlantic Ocean. But because the destination for the satellite is a very high orbit, “the first-stage will be subject to extreme velocities and re-entry heating, making a successful landing challenging,” the company said in a statement.

Still, SpaceX stuck the landing the last time under similar conditions. And now in its quest to launch and recover rockets so that they may be used again, SpaceX is acquiring quite a collection of previously used booster stages: Two that landed on platforms at sea, and one that landed on a pad the company has built on the Cape.

Three leaders in commercial space flight, Elon Musk of SpaceX, Jeff Bezos of Blue Origin, and Richard Branson of Virgin Galactic, discuss the path to making commercial spaceflight a reality. (Jhaan Elker/The Washington Post)

Reusing rockets, instead of ditching them in the ocean as had been the norm since the Apollo era, is a key to lower the cost of space travel and making it more accessible to the masses, Musk has said. Meantime, the company continues to practice. And you get to watch the livestream.

“We’ll be successful, ironically, when it becomes boring. When it’s like, ‘Oh, yeah, another landing. No news there,’” Musk said after the first sea landing in April.

In the meantime, the company's hangar is filling up with used boosters.

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