Skip to main content

Footage of SpaceX’s amazing rocket landings never gets old

SpaceX first achieved the remarkable feat of landing its 70-foot-tall, first-stage Falcon 9 booster in December 2015. Since then, it’s nailed the landing procedure, whether it takes place on land or on a barge stationed out in the ocean.

The landings enable SpaceX to reuse the boosters for multiple orbital missions, allowing for a more rapid launch cycle and significantly reduced flight costs.

Watching one of SpaceX’s boosters come in to land is a sight to behold, its engines roaring back into life to steady itself and its landing legs deploying for a perfect touchdown — upright.

On Thursday, SpaceX shared some wonderful footage (below) of its latest landing following a mission to deploy 40 broadband satellites for U.K.-based OneWeb. The Falcon 9 first stage separated at an altitude of about 50 miles, 150 seconds after launching from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. And then, 7 minutes and 50 seconds after departure, the booster made a perfect touchdown back at Kennedy.

Check out the video as the camera tracks the booster on its approach to the landing site.

Falcon 9's first stage has landed pic.twitter.com/0JxddJt5Sd

— SpaceX (@SpaceX) December 8, 2022

This particular booster has already flown on multiple missions, namely CRS-24, Eutelsat HOTBIRD 13F, and one Starlink flight. SpaceX will check it over, refurbish it, and ready it for another flight.

Like any new space technology, it took SpaceX engineers years to perfect the Falcon 9 landing, with many of the early efforts ending in failure when the booster either came down too hard or toppled over seconds after touching down. But each failure provided the team with new data to work with, enabling it to eventually perfect the process.

Attention is now shifting to SpaceX’s next-generation Super Heavy rocket, which comprises the first-stage Super Heavy booster and the second-stage Starship spacecraft. The rocket is set for its first orbital test flight in the coming months and will become the most powerful space vehicle ever to fly when it takes to the skies. While the Falcon 9 is geared toward low-Earth orbital missions, the mighty Super Heavy will power spacecraft to the moon and possibly beyond.

The first orbital test flight won’t attempt to land the Super Heavy’s first stage, though SpaceX said that it eventually plans to do so.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Watch SpaceX stack Starship rocket ahead of fourth test flight
SpaceX's Starship rocket being stacked for its fourth test flight.

SpaceX chief Elon Musk shared a video on Thursday showing the Starship rocket being stacked on the launchpad ahead of its fourth test flight.

The footage (below), which has been sped up, shows the spacecraft section being placed atop the booster at SpaceX’s Starbase launch facility in Boca Chica, Texas. The fully stacked vehicle stands a colossal 120 meters tall.

Read more
SpaceX facing FAA review of Starship launches from Kennedy
SpaceX's Starship rocket lifting off in November 2023.

SpaceX currently launches the Starship -- the most powerful rocket ever built -- from its Starbase facility in Boca Chica, Texas, but it also wants to launch it from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

For that to happen, its plans will first have to be cleared by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) by way of an environmental review, the agency announced on Friday.

Read more
SpaceX shares footage of gorgeous orbital sunrise
An orbital sunrise as seen from a SpaceX rocket.

SpaceX has shared footage of a stunning orbital sunrise captured during the deployment of another batch of Starlink satellites.

The video shows the orbital sunrise occurring just as the SpaceX vehicle deploys the Starlink satellites in low-Earth orbit.

Read more