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      Starship : SpaceX annonce enfin une date pour le troisième vol de sa méga-fusée

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Thursday, 7 March - 13:23

    Starship 3 Fueling Test

    Si tout se déroule comme prévu, l'énorme lanceur de SpaceX devrait reprendre du service le 14 mars prochain.
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      The next Starship mission has a tentative launch date: March 14

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 6 March - 14:01

    SpaceX's Starship rocket completes a fueling test on Sunday night.

    Enlarge / SpaceX's Starship rocket completes a fueling test on Sunday night. (credit: SpaceX)

    After SpaceX completed a fueling test of its third full Starship stack on Sunday night , successfully loading more than 10 million pounds of methane and liquid oxygen propellant onto the rocket, it was only a matter of time before the world's largest rocket took flight.

    Now, we have a tentative date. In a post on the social media site X , the company posted a link to watch "Starship's third flight test" at 7:30 am ET (11:30 UTC) on March 14. Published on Tuesday morning, the social media post was 'hidden,' but somehow discovered late Tuesday night.

    Nevertheless, this is a credible date that the company is working toward. The hardware, following the fueling test on Sunday night at the company's Starbase site in South Texas, appears to be in good shape. And although SpaceX has yet to receive its launch license from the Federal Aviation Administration, the agency recently announced that it has closed its investigation into the second Starship test flight in November. So a mid-March launch date is plausible from a regulatory standpoint.

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      La fusée Starship de SpaceX simule un décollage et stoppe au dernier moment

      news.movim.eu / Numerama · Tuesday, 5 March - 09:34

    Starship

    Le troisième vol du Starship se rapproche. Un essai de remplissage des réservoirs a eu lieu début mars. Le décollage est attendu dans les prochaines semaines.

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      SpaceX a des solutions pour éviter une nouvelle explosion du Starship

      news.movim.eu / Numerama · Tuesday, 27 February - 11:26

    SpaceX a identifié 17 soucis à corriger avant le troisième vol du Starship. Sept concernent l'étage du bas, 10 l'étage du haut. Des mesures correctives sont requises avant tout feu pour un nouvel essai, espéré au mois de mars.

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      SpaceX discloses cause of Starship anomalies as it clears an FAA hurdle

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 26 February - 23:53

    Starship launches on its second flight on November 18, 2023.

    Enlarge / Starship launches on its second flight on November 18, 2023. (credit: SpaceX)

    A little more than three months after the most recent launch of a Starship vehicle, which ended with both the booster and upper stage being lost in flight, the Federal Aviation Administration has closed its investigation of the mishap.

    "SpaceX identified, and the FAA accepts, the root causes and 17 corrective actions documented in SpaceX’s mishap report," the federal agency said in a statement issued Monday. "Prior to the next launch, SpaceX must implement all corrective actions and receive a license modification from the FAA that addresses all safety, environmental and other applicable regulatory requirements."

    SpaceX must still submit additional information to the FAA, which is responsible for the safety of people and property on the ground, before the agency completes its review of an application to launch Starship for a third time. The administrator for Commercial Space Transportation at the Federal Aviation Administration, Kelvin Coleman, said last week that early- to mid-March is a reasonable timeline for the regulatory process to conclude.

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      Rocket Report: Starliner launch preps; Indian rocket engine human-rated

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 23 February - 12:00 · 1 minute

    The first stage of United Launch Alliance's Atlas V rocket was lifted onto its launch platform this week in preparation for an April liftoff with two NASA astronauts on Boeing's Starliner Crew Flight Test.

    Enlarge / The first stage of United Launch Alliance's Atlas V rocket was lifted onto its launch platform this week in preparation for an April liftoff with two NASA astronauts on Boeing's Starliner Crew Flight Test. (credit: United Launch Alliance)

    Welcome to Edition 6.32 of the Rocket Report! I'm writing the report again this week as Eric Berger is in Washington, DC, to receive a well-earned honor, the 2024 Excellence in Commercial Space Journalism Award from the Commercial Spaceflight Federation. Cape Canaveral is the world's busiest spaceport, and this week, three leading US launch companies were active there. SpaceX launched another Falcon 9 rocket, and a few miles away, Blue Origin raised a New Glenn rocket on its launch pad for long-awaited ground testing. Nearby, United Launch Alliance began assembling an Atlas V rocket for the first crew launch of Boeing's Starliner spacecraft in April. 2024 is shaping up to be a truly exciting year for the spaceflight community.

    As always, we welcome reader submissions , and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets, as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

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    Astroscale inspector satellite launched by Rocket Lab. Astroscale, a well-capitalized Japanese startup, has launched a small satellite to do something that has never been done in space, Ars reports . This new spacecraft, delivered into orbit on February 18 by Rocket Lab, will approach a defunct upper stage from a Japanese H-IIA rocket that has been circling Earth for more than 15 years. Over the next few months, the satellite will try to move within arm's reach of the rocket, taking pictures and performing complicated maneuvers to move around the bus-size H-IIA upper stage as it moves around the planet at nearly 5 miles per second (7.6 km/s).

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      SpaceX seeks a waiver to launch Starship “at least” nine times this year

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 22 February - 16:09

    SpaceX's second Starship rocket is seen on the launch pad at its Starbase facility in South Texas.

    Enlarge / SpaceX's second Starship rocket is seen on the launch pad at its Starbase facility in South Texas. (credit: SpaceX)

    As SpaceX nears its first Starship launch of 2024—possibly as soon as within three weeks—from its Starbase facility in South Texas, the company is pressing regulators to increase its cadence of flights.

    During a press availability this week, the administrator for Commercial Space Transportation at the Federal Aviation Administration, Kelvin Coleman, said the agency is working with the company to try to facilitate the Starship launch-licensing process.

    "They're looking at a pretty aggressive launch schedule this year," he said. "They're looking at, I believe, at least nine launches this year. That's a lot of launches. If you're doing modifications and doing them one by one, that's a lot of work. We've been talking to SpaceX constantly around the clock, coming together and trying to figure out how do we do this. We're invested with the company, and so we'll work with them to get them back going as soon as they can."

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      SpaceX wants to take over a Florida launch pad from rival ULA

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Sunday, 18 February - 01:27

    SpaceX's fully-stacked Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster on a launch pad in South Texas.

    Enlarge / SpaceX's fully-stacked Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster on a launch pad in South Texas. (credit: SpaceX )

    One of the largest launch pads at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station will become vacant later this year after the final flight of United Launch Alliance's Delta IV Heavy rocket. SpaceX is looking to make the sprawling facility a new home for the Starship launch vehicle.

    The environmental review for SpaceX's proposal to take over Space Launch Complex 37 (SLC-37) at Cape Canaveral is getting underway now, with three in-person public meetings and one virtual meeting scheduled for March to collect comments from local residents, according to a new website describing the plan .

    Then federal agencies, led by the Department of the Air Force, will develop an environmental impact statement to evaluate how Starship launch and landing operations will affect the land, air, and water around SLC-37, which sits on Space Force property on the Atlantic coastline.

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