Skip to main content

SpaceX just nailed its most challenging Falcon 9 rocket landing to date

SpaceX

Update: thanks to favorable weather conditions and a perfectly executed launch, SpaceX’s Nusantara Satu mission was at least a partial success. At time of writing, the rocket’s payloads (a satellite and a lunar lander) have not yet been delivered into orbit, but it’s second stage booster was successfully recovered after landing on SpaceX’s autonomous drone ship, Of Course I Still Love You  

If you’ve been following the SpaceX launch calendar you’ll know that this week will mark the first launch from Cape Canaveral in two months. The good news is that the weather forecast for Cape Canaveral on Thursday, February 21, looks fine, with an 80 percent chance of favorable conditions.

The payload of the Falcon 9 will be in three parts: Firstly, an Indonesian communications satellite owned by the telecommunications company PSN, secondly, an experimental satellite developed by the U.S. Air Force which is attached to the larger satellite for more efficient deployment and which will separate and find its own orbit, and thirdly, the first Israeli mission to the moon and the first privately funded lunar mission, the Beresheet spacecraft.

Nusantara Satu Mission

This will be the first SpaceX launch in some time as it launched a mission code-named SpX-16 in December which had issues with the grid fin hydraulic pump on re-entry. The company then had planned to launch the Dragon Capsule spacecraft uncrewed to test it on a journey to the International Space Station (ISS) in January. The craft should eventually be used to ferry astronauts to and from the ISS, but the launch date had to be pushed back and the test flight is now scheduled for March.

The launch on February 21 will be of a Falcon 9 rocket, the type which SpaceX has been using since 2010. Unlike most other rockets, the Falcon 9 is partially reusable with a first stage which separates from the rest of the rocket and is capable of re-entering the atmosphere and landing to be used again. As with any space project though, things don’t always go as planned and there have been problems with landing the reusable portion of the rocket in the past. We will have to wait and see whether the SpaceX team has nailed the launch this time around.

The launch will take place on Thursday, February 21, at 8:45 p.m. ET. To watch the event live, simply tune in to the video embedded above. If you are interested in the Israeli mission to the moon specifically, you may want to check out the SpaceIL Facebook page where they will be sharing live video from inside the control room in Yehud, Israel.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
How to watch SpaceX launch an Italian satellite on Monday
COSMO-SkyMed mission ready for launch.

Update January 30: The Italian satellite launch has been scrubbed once again, this time due to a cruise liner appearing in the hazard area close to the launch site. The launch is now scheduled for Monday, January 31 at 6:11 p.m. ET (3:11 p.m. PT).

SpaceX will launch an Italian satellite on Monday in a mission that has already suffered several delays due to bad weather, as well as the appearance of a cruise liner in the hazard area. Conditions at the launch site in Florida are looking promising for Monday, so we've got the details on how to watch the launch.

Read more
SpaceX rocket set to slam into the moon at 5,000 mph
A Falcon 9 rocket lifts off on May 30, for the first crewed test flight of the Crew Dragon capsule. flight

While SpaceX has nailed the process of landing the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket back on terra firma, the second stage is left to burn up in the atmosphere as it falls back to Earth. At least, that’s what usually happens.

A mission launched by SpaceX in 2015 to send the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Deep Space Climate Observatory into a distant orbit completed all of the necessary deployment steps, but then it went a bit awry, according to an Ars Technica report.

Read more
Watch highlights of SpaceX’s spectacular Starlink night launch
A SpaceX rocket heading to space.

SpaceX has just launched another batch of Starlink internet satellites to space.

A Falcon 9 rocket departed Launch Complex 39A at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 9:02 p.m. ET on Tuesday night.

Read more