Author Topic: SpaceX aims to conduct the first orbital Starship test flight in 2021  (Read 320 times)

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Offline Elderberry

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TESMANIAN by Evelyn Arevalo September 05, 2020

SpaceX, the aerospace company that returned human spaceflight capabilities to the United States, aims to launch the first cargo mission to Mars in 2022, then send the first humans in 2024. The company envisions a sustainable colony established on the Red Planet before the year 2050. To make the ambitious endeavor a reality, SpaceX is developing its next-generation spacecraft that will be capable of conducting long-duration voyages through deep space. Multiple Starship prototypes are undergoing manufacturing and testing at a small beach village called Boca Chica in South Texas. The founder of SpaceX, Elon Musk, expects at least twenty prototypes to conduct test flights before attempting flying one to space. He hopes to launch a Starship to orbit next year.

The company is already laying down the foundation of an orbital-class Starship launch pad at Boca Chica beach. “Building the production system so that we can build ultimately hundreds or thousands of Starships, that’s the hard part,” he said during a recent Humans To Mars teleconference, “But we’ve been making good progress on the production system as people can see from the aerial photos of Boca Chica. […] A year ago, there was almost nothing there, and now we’ve got quite a lot of production capability.” The hexagon-shaped ‘orbital launch mount’ was spotted by an aerial photographer at the facility, pictured below. – “We’re rapidly making more and more ships, and we’ll be starting production of the booster soon,” he added. The Super Heavy rocket booster will propel the Starship spacecraft out of Earth’s atmosphere, this enables it to carry more mass and conserve its propellant. Musk said SpaceX teams at Boca Chica will initiate the construction of ‘booster prototype one’ this month.

Musk said he expects to conduct “hundreds” of Starship missions deploying satellites before putting humans on board. SpaceX’s first Starship passenger, Japanese entrepreneur Yusaku Maezawa, booked a voyage around the moon scheduled for the year 2023. Building a reusable Starship capable of carrying one hundred passengers comes with an expensive price tag, Maezawa is helping fund the spacecraft’s development that will change the course of humanity’s future. Although the price he paid for the Starship flight has not been released to the public, Musk has mentioned on several occasions he feels thankful that Maezawa booked a space tour to help fund Starship's development because the payment Maezawa made was significant enough that it will “have a material effect on paying for cost and development of Starship,” Musk told reporters last year– “He's paying a lot of money that would help with the ship and its booster. [...] He's ultimately paying for the average citizen to travel to other planets.”

More: https://www.tesmanian.com/blogs/tesmanian-blog/starship-2021