Advertisement

SpaceX ‘chopsticks’ catch Starship megarocket booster after test flight

In an engineering feat, mechanical SpaceX arms catch Starship rocket booster back at the launch pad

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
17
Starship’s Super Heavy Booster being grappled at the launch pad. Photo: AFP

SpaceX on Sunday successfully flew the first-stage booster of its Starship megarocket back to the launch pad after a test flight, a technical tour de force that furthers the company’s quest for rapid reusability.

Advertisement

The “super heavy booster” had blasted off attached to the uncrewed Starship rocket minutes earlier, then made a picture-perfect controlled return to the same pad in Texas, where a pair of huge mechanical “chopsticks” reached out from the launch tower to bring the slowly descending booster to a halt, according to a livestream from Elon Musk’s SpaceX company.

Not long afterward, the upper stage of Starship splashed down, as planned, in the Indian Ocean, a development saluted by Musk on X.

“Ship landed precisely on target!” he said of the vehicle’s fifth test flight. “Second of the two objectives achieved.”

The successful “catching” of the booster at its Texas launch pad had company staffers erupting in cheers.

Advertisement
Advertisement