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SpaceX Plans to Blow Up Rocket Over Atlantic Ocean Next Week

SpaceX Plans to Blow Up Rocket Over Atlantic Ocean Next Week
SpaceX Plans to Blow Up Rocket Over Atlantic Ocean Next Week

SpaceX and NASA are working together to blow up a rocket over the Atlantic Ocean. The experiment, called an in-flight abort test, will likely lead to the destruction of a Falcon 9 rocket in what SpaceX is referring to as “rapid scheduled disassembly.”
That test was supposed to happen this week but has since been pushed to Jan. 18 to allow “additional time for spacecraft processing”, NASA said earlier this week, BBC News reported. 
The test intends to demonstrate that the Crew Dragon spacecraft has a capable emergency escape system. Once proven, NASA is expected to give the final thumbs-up to allow the craft to begin ferrying astronauts back and forth to the International Space Station.
A Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Crew Dragon is expected to launch from Florida’s Kennedy Space Station. It’ll fly for 88 seconds before SpaceX initiates the test. From there, SuperDraco engines will propel the Crew Dragon away from the rocket, where it will parachute to an ocean landing.
Once the Crew Dragon and Falcon 9 separate, the latter is expected to explode approximately 31 kilometers (19 miles) from the test site. Engineers hope the experiment ends in a fiery explosion for the Falcon 9, as it would consume any remaining fuel before the rocket lands in the ocean. But there’s a chance this may not happen. 
SpaceX estimates that there’s a less than 1% chance the rocket would fall to the water intact. If it does, any remaining fuel could be consumed by an even bigger explosion caused by the impact. SpaceX plans to recover all floating debris.

 

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