Astronomy / Space [Live] SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch today

here is a script from the press conference about the center rocket failure

Two of the three need landing engines could not light for landing because it ran out of igniter (not fuel). The center engine couldnt slow down enough with only one engine. It hit the ocean at about 500 mph near the ship. The shrapnel took out two of the ships four thrusters.
Elon said they were not going to reuse any parts of this rocket anyway because none of the parts were block 5.
There was no design or mechnical failure with the center core.
Elon said they have the video and it will make the blooper reel.
 
The rocket of Elon Musk which has to take the astronauts to the Moon and to Mars, will no be the Falcon Heavy but will be named "Big f u c k i n g rocket" (another project)

:p

It will certainly be very impressive
 
LOL @ Patrick.

Watching those two boosters land safely back on the pad was a bit magical.

You're right; rockets landing while standing upright (on a 1G planet too) is real Tintin / Sci-fi stuff. Amazing.

I think it's a shame he couldn't put some sort of student built satellite on there. I understand he couldn't get insurance for anything else but I'm sure a large number of primary schools would have jumped at the chance to crash something into the Sun. The Roadster, while funny, is a bit allegorical of humans being an incredibly messy species (now we have space junk in orbit of Mars too!? Great.). Bowie's a nice touch but still.

If it were modelled in the game, I'd like to see it done as danger to space traffic .. you can target, drop see the car and a write up (potentially important, democratising space by bringing costs down) but your ship encounters an emergency / damaging SC drop, from hitting Elon's ego.
 
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Starman facing history's biggest detour as SpaceX's Tesla Roadster exceeds Mars orbit




Photo:
Diagram of SpaceX's Roadster and "Starman" projected orbit.



The world's first space sports car is cruising towards the Asteroid Belt, well beyond its intended destination.


SpaceX chief Elon Musk's rocketing Tesla Roadster was the unorthodox cargo aboard his company's brand new Falcon Heavy rocket during a test flight on Tuesday.

With the successful launch, the Heavy became the most powerful rocket flying today.


Mr Musk's cherry red electric convertible also became the fastest car ever, hurtling off the planet and zooming away on its intended route to Mars.
The original plan was to come close to the red planet but hopefully not nicking it.


But late on Tuesday (local time), Mr Musk confirmed the final firing of the rocket's upper stage put his car on a more distant trajectory than anticipated.
"Third burn successful. Exceeded Mars orbit and kept going to the Asteroid Belt," Mr Musk said on Twitter.

The Roadster's new orbit now stretches from Earth on one end, all the way to the neighbourhood of Ceres — in the Asteroid Belt — on the other.


If it survives the swarming asteroid belt, the car and its mannequin occupant "Starman" are expected to continue orbiting for millions, if not billions, of years.


Images of the exposed Roadster and Starman — named after the David Bowie song — against the backdrop of Earth burned up the internet long after Tuesday's launch.


"I think it looks so ridiculous and impossible. You can tell it's real because it looks so fake, honestly," Mr Musk said on Tuesday night.


"It's still tripping me out."



Like so many others, NASA astronaut Ricky Arnold was awe-struck by the livestreaming of "Starman" and his ride.


Mr Arnold is preparing for his own ride to the International Space Station next month.


"Perfect day for a cruise in a ragtop," he tweeted, offering congratulations to SpaceX.

"Awesome! At this speed, two hands on the steering wheel please #Starman."



Buzz Aldrin, the second man to step onto the moon, also celebrated after watching the rocket soar, "from my favorite launch pad".


The Heavy lifted off from the same spot as NASA's now-retired but more powerful Saturn V moon rockets and space shuttles.


The Heavy is a combo of three Falcon 9s, that SpaceX uses to ship space station supplies and launch satellites for its customers.


Mars is driving all of Mr Musk's space efforts.


Mr Musk said he did not plan to fly people on the Heavy — that will mainly be used to launch supersize satellites.


But he's accelerating development of an even bigger rocket for deep-space crews — "a beast".


His overriding goal is to establish a city on Mars, sending people there in a flotilla of SpaceX spaceships launched by colossal SpaceX rockets.


Before dashing off to the red planet, Mr Musk said he would want to try out this spaceship in orbit around Earth — possibly in three to four years with the supersize rocket — and then the moon.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-02-08/spacex-starman-misses-mars-heading-to-asteroid-belt/9407678
 
The booster rockets landing was awesome.

The launch was an edge of the seat experience but certainly the booster landing was one of the most damned impressive things I've ever seen.
Coming from a childhood where space ships were always shown as a Chesley Bonestell style torpedo shape with three fins landed upright and then led to believe it was impractical and would never happen.

Then to see it happening live in my lifetime and a pair of them landing in sync, mind blown, a big cheer and applause followed.
 
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spaceweather.com is reporting on amateur photos of the Roadster, circled in red.

roadster_strip.jpg
NASA is also listing the electric car in its database of celestial objects. Space weather doesn't have blog breadcrumbs though, so for posterity; co-ordinates are findable in JPL's empheris by launching the Horizons web interface. Next to Target Body, click "change". Type in "SpaceX" and hit enter. Click "Generate Ephemeris."
 
Maybe, maybe not...

Which scenario/story will get more air time for the reporter (at the moment)?

Elon himself said that he works 100 hours by week

And he asks to his closest employees for a huge personal investment with all the consequences that we can imagine
 
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