Behold! SpaceX's 1st Falcon Heavy Rocket on
the Launchpad
If you needed a reminder that SpaceX is about to debut its huge
new Falcon Heavy rocket, here you og.
The company just released some gorgeous photos and a spectacular
video of the Falcon Heavy standing at Kennedy Space Center's fabled Pad 39A -
the one-time jumping-off point for space shuttle and Apollo moon missions -
ahead of its planned liftoff later this month. (SpaceX has not announced a
target date yet.)
"With more than 5 million pounds of thrust at liftoff - equal
to approximately eighteen 747 aircraft at full power - Falcon Heavy will be the
most powerful operational rocket in the world by a factor of two," SpaceX
representatives wrote on Twitter and Instagram, where they posted the new
video.
That power comes from a whopping 27 first-stage Merlin engines -
three times more than SpaceX's workhorse Falcon 9 rocket has. Indeed, the
Falcon Heavy's first stage is essentially three Falcon 9 cores strapped
together.
These three boosters are designed to be reusable; after liftoff,
they will fly back down to Earth for pinpoint, vertical landings, as they do on
most Falcon 9 flights.
Like the Falcon 9, the Heavy is a two-stage rocket. The second
stage is powered by a single Merlin, which is identical to the one in the
Falcon 9's upper stage.
If all goes according to plan, this month's shakeout cruise will
send a red Roadster built by Tesla - the electric-car company Musk runs - into
deep space.
"Test flights of new rockets usually contain mass simulators
in the form of concrete or steel blocks. That seemed extremely boring,"
Musk wrote in an Instagram post last month. "Of course, anything boring is
terrible, especially companies, so we decided to send something unusual,
something that made us feel. The payload will be an original Tesla Roadster,
playing [David Bowie's] 'Space Oddity,' on a billion-year elliptic Mars
orbit."
Of course, there's no guarantee everything will go according to
plan. Maiden launches are risky endeavors, and Musk has stressed that we
shouldn't be surprised if the first Falcon Heavy dies a fiery death.
"I hope it makes it far enough away from the pad that it does not cause pad damage. I would consider even that a win, to be honest," Musk said at a conference last July. "Major pucker factor, really; that's, like, the only way to describe it."
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