Posted on 01/16/2016 8:32:03 AM PST by Jack Hydrazine
The Falcon 9 booster that dramatically flew back to Earth last month following a commercial satellite launch ignited again Friday in a hold-down test at SpaceXâs Cape Canaveral launch pad, days before the company is due to launch its next mission from California, officials said.
SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk tweeted that the âdata looks good overallâ but one of the Merlin engines â Engine No. 9 â showed thrust fluctuations during the test firing.
Officials did not say how long the nine-engine first stage fired at the Complex 40 launch pad at Cape Canaveral, where the Falcon 9 took off Dec. 21 with 11 Orbcomm communications satellites before its first stage descended back to a landing zone a few miles to the south.
Technicians first took the 156-foot first stage booster to launch pad 39A, an Apollo- and shuttle-era launch complex now leased by SpaceX at NASAâs Kennedy Space Center, then transferred the rocket back to pad 40 and hoisted it upright with a crane.
Musk said after the Dec. 21 launch that SpaceX would fire the rocket at pad 39A, but those plans changed.
SpaceX does not intend to fly the returned Falcon 9 booster, called Flight 21 in the companyâs nomenclature, but engineers hope to learn how the rocket fared on its brief flight into space.
Ground inspections and tests like Fridayâs hold-down engine firing are crucial for SpaceX to determine how easily the first stage could be refurbished and readied to launch again.
In a post to his Twitter account, Musk said the thrust fluctuations detected on Engine No. 9 could be caused by debris ingested into the engine.
âEngine data looks ok,â Musk tweeted. âWill borescope tonight. This is one of the outer engines.â
Musk aims to eventually refly Falcon 9 boosters with little refurbishment, a goal he says is vital to reducing the cost of space transportation and achieving his objective of sending people to Mars.
The Dec. 21 launch marked the first time an orbital-class rocket took off and had its first stage return to the launch site. The Falcon 9âs second stage continued into orbit to deploy the missionâs 11 refrigerator-sized Orbcomm satellite payloads.
Blue Origin, a rival space company founded by Amazon.comâs Jeff Bezos, became the first company to launch a commercial vehicle into space and return it to a vertical rocket-assisted landing in November, nearly a month before SpaceXâs achievement.
Blue Originâs New Shepard booster is smaller than the Falcon 9, and it carried no operational satellites.
Fridayâs engine firing at Cape Canaveral occurred at SpaceX teams in California prepare for the companyâs next flight, a Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Jason 3 oceanography satellite for an international consortium of weather and space agencies led by NOAA and Eumetsat, the European weather satellite organization.
SpaceX will use Sundayâs launch to conduct another experimental rocket landing attempt on a barge positioned in the Pacific Ocean south of the Falcon 9 launch site at Vandenberg Air Force Base.
Hans Koenigsmann, SpaceXâs vice president of mission assurance, said Friday that a landing platform named âJust Read the Instructionsâ â named for a starship in science fiction novels penned by Iain Banks â will be the destination for the Falcon first stage.
Like all of SpaceXâs rocket landing attempts, the objective is secondary to the delivery of the Jason 3 satellite into orbit, Koenigsmann said.
SpaceX officials said the company hopes to show the landing attempt on the live webcast of the launch.
âThe reason we donât land on land, or attempt to land on land like we did for the last mission at the Cape, is that we do not have environmental approval at this point time on this range,â Koenigsmann told reporters. âThat is something that we will do in the future.â
The Falcon 9 rocket set to launch Sunday is the last of SpaceXâs previous generation of boosters called the Falcon 9 v1.1. An upgraded version with higher-thrust engines, chilled propellants and enlarged fuel tanks debuted on the Dec. 21 flight from Florida and will launch on future SpaceX missions.
Koenigsmann said the Falcon 9 first stage launching from California on Sunday would have enough propellant left over after its approximately two-and-a-half minute firing to power its way back to the coast. The Jason 3 satellite weighs about 1,124 pounds, or 510 kilograms, much less than the Falcon 9âs maximum lift capacity.
The forecast calls for perfect weather for launch at Vandenberg, but waves of 10 to 13 feet are predicted in the recovery zone in the Pacific Ocean.
âCurrently, things are looking good,â Koenigsmann said. âThe sea state is good for surfing, and a little high for landing, but we donât anticipate that is going to be a major problem. Iâm pretty hopeful. We had a really good landing last time, so things are looking good at this point in time.â
“The Falcon has landed” | Recap of Falcon 9 launch and landing
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANv5UfZsvZQ
Falcon 9 First-Stage Sunrise Timelapse
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvWBf1IjzrY
Falcon 9 First Stage Landing | From Helicopter
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCBE8ocOkAQ
Human Mars Exploration - How Landing Sites Could Evolve | VIdeo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrxqyCnxafg
Next Falcon 9 launch this Sunday, 17JAN2016 at 10:42a.m. PST/1:42p.m. EST
Launch site: SLC-4E, Vandenberg Air Force Base, California
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch the Jason 3 ocean altimetry mission. Jason 3 will measure ocean surface topography to aid in ocean circulation and climate change research for NOAA, EUMETSAT, NASA and the French space agency, CNES. Delayed from March 31, July 22 and December. [Dec. 12]
List of Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy launches
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Falcon_9_and_Falcon_Heavy_launches
First launch of NASA and NOAA joint science mission under the NLS II launch contract (not related to NASA CRS or USAF OSP3 contracts). Last launch of the original Falcon 9 v1.1 rocket. SpaceX will again attempt a landing on an autonomous drone ship located in the Pacific Ocean.[92]
Jason-3 satellite
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason-3
Jason-3 is an international Earth observation satellite mission that continues the sea surface height measurements begun in 1992 by the joint NASA/CNES TOPEX/Poseidon mission, followed by the NASA/CNES Jason-1 mission launched in 2001 and Jason-2 mission in 2008.[1]
Cleaned up:
The Falcon 9 booster that dramatically flew back to Earth last month following a commercial satellite launch ignited again Friday in a hold-down test at SpaceX’s Cape Canaveral launch pad, days before the company is due to launch its next mission from California, officials said.
SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk tweeted that the “data looks good overall” - but one of the Merlin engines - Engine No. 9 - showed thrust fluctuations during the test firing.
Officials did not say how long the nine-engine first stage fired at the Complex 40 launch pad at Cape Canaveral, where the Falcon 9 took off Dec. 21 with 11 Orbcomm communications satellites before its first stage descended back to a landing zone a few miles to the south.
Technicians first took the 156-foot first stage booster to launch pad 39A, an Apollo-and shuttle-era launch complex now leased by SpaceX at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, then transferred the rocket back to pad 40 and hoisted it upright with a crane.
Musk said after the Dec. 21 launch that SpaceX would fire the rocket at pad 39A, but those plans changed.
SpaceX does not intend to fly the returned Falcon 9 booster, called Flight 21 in the company’s nomenclature, but engineers hope to learn how the rocket fared on its brief flight into space.
Ground inspections and tests like Friday’s hold-down engine firing are crucial for SpaceX to determine how easily the first stage could be refurbished and readied to launch again.
In a post to his Twitter account, Musk said the thrust fluctuations detected on Engine No. 9 could be caused by debris ingested into the engine.
“Engine data looks ok,” Musk tweeted. “Will borescope tonight. This is one of the outer engines.”
Musk aims to eventually refly Falcon 9 boosters with little refurbishment, a goal he says is vital to reducing the cost of space transportation and achieving his objective of sending people to Mars.
The Dec. 21 launch marked the first time an orbital-class rocket took off and had its first stage return to the launch site. The Falcon 9’s second stage continued into orbit to deploy the mission’s 11 refrigerator-sized Orbcomm satellite payloads.
Blue Origin, a rival space company founded by Amazon.com’s Jeff Bezos, became the first company to launch a commercial vehicle into space and return it to a vertical rocket-assisted landing in November, nearly a month before SpaceX’s achievement.
Blue Origin’s New Shepard booster is smaller than the Falcon 9, and it carried no operational satellites.
Friday’s engine firing at Cape Canaveral occurred at SpaceX teams in California prepare for the company’s next flight, a Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Jason 3 oceanography satellite for an international consortium of weather and space agencies led by NOAA and Eumetsat, the European weather satellite organization.
SpaceX will use Sunday’s launch to conduct another experimental rocket landing attempt on a barge positioned in the Pacific Ocean south of the Falcon 9 launch site at Vandenberg Air Force Base.
Hans Koenigsmann, SpaceX’s vice president of mission assurance, said Friday that a landing platform named “Just Read the Instructions” - named for a starship in science fiction novels (edit: The Culture Series - “Player of Games. General Contact Unit {larger than 20 km}, River Class) penned by Iain M. Banks (edit: deceased) - will be the destination for the Falcon first stage.
Like all of SpaceX’s rocket landing attempts, the objective is secondary to the delivery of the Jason 3 satellite into orbit, Koenigsmann said.
SpaceX officials said the company hopes to show the landing attempt on the live webcast of the launch.
“The reason we don’t land on land, or attempt to land on land like we did for the last mission at the Cape, is that we do not have environmental approval at this point time on this range,” Koenigsmann told reporters. “That is something that we will do in the future.”
The Falcon 9 rocket set to launch Sunday is the last of Space’s previous generation of boosters called the Falcon 9 v1.1. An upgraded version with higher-thrust engines, chilled propellants and enlarged fuel tanks debuted on the Dec. 21 flight from Florida and will launch on future SpaceX missions.
Koenigsmann said the Falcon 9 first stage launching from California on Sunday would have enough propellant left over after its approximately two-and-a-half minute firing to power its way back to the coast. The Jason 3 satellite weighs about 1,124 pounds, or 510 kilograms, much less than the Falcon 9’s maximum lift capacity.
The forecast calls for perfect weather for launch at Vandenberg, but waves of 10 to 13 feet are predicted in the recovery zone in the Pacific Ocean.
“Currently, things are looking good,” Koenigsmann said. “The sea state is good for surfing, and a little high for landing, but we don’t anticipate that is going to be a major problem. I’m pretty hopeful. We had a really good landing last time, so things are looking good at this point in time.”
Rocket "assisted" landing??? On the vid I watched, I didn't see anything BUT the rocket in action. The PAYLOAD came back by parachute, but the booster return was "all rocket, all the time".
A little off topic but did you see this?
Sierra Nevadaâs Dream Chaser mini-shuttle will join NASAâs space cargo fleet
http://www.geekwire.com/2016/sierra-nevadas-dream-chaser-mini-shuttle-will-join-nasas-cargo-fleet/
Sierra Nevada’s Dream Chaser mini-shuttle will join NASA’s space cargo fleet
I missed that. I’m surprised they were picked since they don’t have any flight-proven hardware.
Something I think the public hasn’t awakened to
is that if we can land a first stage back here on
earth the same technique will allow us to land on
Mars, land big vehicles on Mars.
Really quite exciting.
SpaceX is already on that!
I’m a little perplexed about that also. Awarding a contract seems premature unless they donât have any flight-proven hardware that we know of. Maybe more behind the scenes that we don’t know of.
Politics, of course!
Handsome Harry?
Paging Colonel Steve Austin. Paging Colonel Steve Austin. Your ride is now on the tarmac, with fuel topped up, awaiting launch clearance from USSTRATCOM.
Partnered with Lockheed Martin.
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n1301/31dreamchaser/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QgdFotAkUEU
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