Posted on 10/10/2018 6:41:30 AM PDT by ETL
All rocket launches are spectacular, but SpaceX took things to another level over the weekend.
On Sunday night (Oct. 7), a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket successfully launched the SAOCOM 1A Earth-observation satellite from Vandenberg Air Force Base on California's Central Coast. And the two-stage booster's first stage landed back at Vandenberg less than 8 minutes after liftoff, pulling off SpaceX's first-ever terra-firma touchdown on California soil.
As it rose into the sky, the Falcon 9 spawned a gigantic, gorgeous, glowing cloud that wowed folks throughout the Golden State. The twilight plume had an otherworldly feel, so some observers made a point of stressing the cloud's Earthly origin.
[In Photos: SpaceX's Fantastic Nighttime Launch of SAOCOM-1 & Rocket Landing!]
"Nope, definitely not aliens. What you're looking at is the first launch and landing of the @SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on the West Coast. The rocket took off from Vandenberg Air Force Base at 7:21 p.m. and landed safely back on Earth," Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti tweeted Sunday night, along with an amazing photo of the Falcon 9 cloud hanging over the city.
Another photo posted by Garcetti captured the pulses of the first stage's small reaction-control thrusters, which etched a big Wi-Fi symbol in the sky. Those thrusters were firing to keep the booster on course for its historic touchdown. (SpaceX has now pulled off 30 first-stage landings, but all the previous ones had occurred at Florida's Cape Canaveral Air Force Station or on robotic "drone ships" stationed in the Atlantic or Pacific oceans.)
Astrophotographer Sean Parker viewed the launch from Joshua Tree National Park in southeastern California and was suitably excited by the sky show.
"That was pretty FN awesome, @elonmusk @SpaceX #falcon9," Parker tweeted yesterday (Oct. 8), along with a photo of himself exulting in the desert beneath the glowing cloud.
And then there are the close-up views of the launch and landing, which SpaceX snapped. These photos are spectacular in a different way, highlighting power and precision rather than abstract and ephemeral beauty. But they are spectacular nonetheless.
SAOCOM 1A, by the way, was developed by Argentina's national space agency. The satellite will observe Earth in radar light from its perch about 385 miles (620 kilometers) above the planet, primarily to measure soil-moisture levels. This information will aid predictions of crop yields and also help planners and emergency-management officials monitor disasters such as floods and fires.
SAOCOM 1A has a twin, SAOCOM 1B, which will make similar observations. SAOCOM 1B will also launch aboard a Falcon 9, perhaps as early as next year.
I happened to be near LA this past weekend visiting friends and was able to see the launch. First time I have ever seen one and it was pretty spectacular.
Lucky you! Not for being anywhere near LA, but for seeing this incredible launch. Did you take pics or video?
I witnessed and photographed the launch Sunday from an unobstructed view above the ocean. There were many there who did not know what it was.
As the second stage shut down, the amount of sky covered in reflected ice crystals was huge, all from a small amount of fuel burn.
It brought to mind the risk of a volcano erupting to our climate when many cubic miles of dust get that high.
MOST amazing is that it has become almost ho hum to launch and retrieve a booster, landing on a dime.
Amazing pictures!
Any statement that starts off with “Definitely not aliens” proves it is definitely aliens.
"Any statement that starts off with Definitely not aliens proves it is definitely aliens"
I think that were I an engineer passionate about outer space it would be a lot more fun to work at a company that says "let's figure out how to send regular people to the moon and beyond" rather than a big government entity that says "let's send another satellite up to take pictures in ten years".
SAOCOM 1A, by the way, was developed by Argentina's national space agency.
"We will fly for you Argentina." -- SpaceX
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