SpaceX's SN4 Starship prototype passes key
pressure test
The newest prototype of SpaceX's Starship Mars-colonizing
spacecraft just passed a crucial pressure test, likely setting the stage for a
test flight in the near future.
Starship SN4 survived a "cryo pressure test" late Sunday
night (April 26) at SpaceX's South Texas site, near the village of Boca Chica,
company founder and CEO Elon Musk announced.
"SN4 passed cryo proof!" Musk said via Twitter late
Sunday Texas time (early morning on Monday, April 27, EDT), in a post that
included a "relieved" emoji. "Great work by SpaceX
engineering!" he added in another tweet.
Musk's excitement is understandable, for success was far from
guaranteed. This trial, in which the vehicle is filled with frigid liquid
nitrogen to simulate the conditions experienced during operational missions,
which will use ultracold propellant, felled three previous prototypes over the
past five months.
The SN4 can now progress to the next step of the development
campaign: engine tests, which will culminate with a static fire of its single
Raptor engine on the ground. In yet another late-night tweet, Musk said SpaceX
aims to conduct the static fire later this week.
Provided that goes well, the SN4 ("Serial No. 4") will
be cleared to fly, on an uncrewed test with a target altitude of 500 feet (150
meters) or so. SN4 would be the first full-size Starship prototype to fly, and
the second of any sort; a stubby test vehicle called Starhopper got off the
ground briefly last year but was soon retired.
Future Starship prototypes will go higher, powered by more
Raptors. For example, the SN5 will sport three of the powerful, next-generation
engines, Musk said in another tweet.
The operational Starship, whose design SpaceX is homing in on via
rapid prototype iteration, will feature six Raptors. The 165-foot-tall (50 m)
spaceship will launch off Earth atop a gigantic rocket known as Super Heavy,
which will have room for 37 of the engines, Musk has said.
Both vehicles will be reusable. Super Heavy will come down to
Earth for vertical touchdowns shortly after liftoff, just as the first stages
of SpaceX's Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets do now. Each Starship, meanwhile,
will be able to fly many missions between Earth and Mars, or Earth and the
moon, or anywhere else people (or payloads) need to go. (Starship will be
powerful enough to launch itself off Mars and the moon, which have relatively
weak gravitational pulls. Super Heavy is needed to get the craft off Earth,
however.)
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