• Sci & Tech

    SpaceX Making Over 1,000 Changes to Starship After Its Botched Launch

    SpaceX apparently learned a lot from the first-ever test flight of its giant Starship rocket two months ago.

    The company has made more than 1,000 changes to Starship's design since that landmark April 20 liftoff, which ended with a controlled destruction of the vehicle high over the Gulf of Mexico, SpaceX Founder and CEO Elon Musk said in a discussion on Twitter on June 24, online space publication Space.com reported.

    SpaceX sent that self-destruct command after Starship experienced a number of problems, including the failure of the vehicle's two stages to separate stressed that the company is taking pains to ensure that latter issue doesn't recur on Starship's next flight.

    "So, we made a sort of late-breaking change that's really quite significant to the way that stage separation works, which is to use hot staging," he said. 

    “In hot staging, the engines on a vehicle's upper stage begin firing before those on the first-stage booster finish shutting down. The strategy, which is commonly employed on Russian rockets, should boost Starship's payload-to-orbit capacity by around 10%.”

    The decision to go with hot staging required a suite of design changes on Starship, however. 

    "The superhot plasma from the upper-stage engines has gotta go somewhere. So we're adding an extension to the booster that is almost all vents, essentially. So that allows the upper-stage engine plume to go through the sort of vented extension of the booster and not just blow itself up," he said.

    The April 20 launch also caused considerable damage to the orbital launch mount at Starbase, SpaceX's facility on South Texas' Gulf Coast. The company has been working to repair that mount and protect it against similar damage in future launches.

    For example, SpaceX is pouring about 35,300 cubic feet (1,000 cubic meters) of "reinforced high-strength concrete" at the mount. And the company is installing a water-spouting steel plate there to counteract the massive amount of heat when the rocket is over the pad.

    That heat comes from the 33 Raptor engines on Starship's first stage, a giant booster the company calls Super Heavy. The upper stage, a 165-foot-tall (50 meters) spacecraft known as Starship, sports six Raptors.

    The Starship that flew on April 20 was powered by Raptors that "were somewhat of a hodgepodge," a collection built and tested over the course of a year. The Starship being groomed for the next flight will feature more uniform engines with several slight but important improvements.

    The April 20 launch aimed to send Starship's upper stage partway around Earth, ending with a splashdown in the Pacific near Hawaii. 

    The next liftoff will have similar aims, Musk said, noting that the pad and the next Starship vehicle — consisting of prototypes called Booster 9 and Ship 25 — should be ready for a launch in six weeks. 

     

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