SpaceX Successfully Completes 11th Starship Test Flight

SpaceX’s latest Starship test flight soared from its South Texas launch site Monday evening, lighting up the coastal sky before completing a full suborbital journey that ended over the Indian Ocean.

The 403-foot rocket — the largest ever built — lifted off at 6:23 p.m. CDT from Starbase, near Boca Chica, Texas. Its Super Heavy booster separated cleanly and made a controlled splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico. Meanwhile, the Starship spacecraft continued its arc across the planet, conducting in-flight maneuvers before descending into the Indian Ocean as planned.

“Hey, welcome back to Earth, Starship,” SpaceX engineer Dan Huot said as cheers erupted at mission control.

Testing the Future of Reusable Rockets

Monday’s flight was the 11th test of the Starship system, following a string of iterative improvements that have gradually transformed it from a volatile prototype into a functional reusable spacecraft.

According to SpaceX, this mission included expanded testing of its heat shield tiles, engine relight capabilities, and aerodynamic control systems—vital components for eventual landings both on Earth and other worlds.

During the flight, the spacecraft also released eight mock Starlink satellites, simulating future payload deployment operations. Nothing from the mission was recovered, as SpaceX focused on gathering data for upcoming reentry trials.

U.S. Inflation Rises Amid Tariffs, Consumer Prices, and Federal Reserve Concerns

SpaceX Successfully Completes 11th Starship Test Flight
SpaceX Successfully Completes 11th Starship Test Flight. Image for illustration only. (Image source: Freepik.com).

Essential for NASA’s Artemis Program

Starship’s ongoing progress is pivotal for NASA’s Artemis program, which relies on the vehicle to ferry astronauts between lunar orbit and the Moon’s surface. Without it, NASA’s plans to return humans to the Moon by the end of the decade could face delays.

NASA’s acting administrator, Sean Duffy, called the latest test “another major step toward landing Americans on the Moon’s south pole,” praising the engineering milestones achieved during the flight.

Looking Ahead to Upgraded Starships

SpaceX is already modifying its Cape Canaveral launch sites to handle future Starship missions, while a next-generation prototype—designed for deep-space refueling and long-duration flight—is in active development.

Refueling demonstrations using two Starships are scheduled for 2026, marking a crucial step toward enabling interplanetary travel.

A Measured but Meaningful Success

For founder and CEO Elon Musk, who watched from outside mission control for the first time, Monday’s test represented “a more visceral” moment in the company’s march toward Mars.

While Starship’s path to operational status is far from complete, this flight showcased SpaceX’s ability to learn from iteration, control its systems, and push closer to full reusability—the foundation of its lunar and Martian ambitions.

Sources:

San Antonio Express-News

Reuters

AP News

Edited by Darryl Linington

news-0112

yakinjp


sabung ayam online

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

rtp yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

judi bola online

slot thailand

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

4020

4021

4022

4023

4024

4025

4026

4027

4028

4029

4030

4031

4032

4033

4034

4035

4036

4037

4038

4039

5046

5047

5048

5049

5050

5051

5052

5053

5054

5055

5061

5062

5063

5064

5065

5066

5067

5068

5069

5070

8076

8077

8078

8079

8080

8081

8082

8083

8084

8085

4055

4056

4057

4058

4059

3126

3127

3128

3129

3130

3131

3132

3133

3134

3135

8051

8082

8113

8144

8175

4090

4091

4092

4093

4094

4095

4096

4097

4098

4099

5036

5037

5038

5039

5040

5071

5072

5073

5074

5075

4100

4101

4102

4103

4104

4105

4106

4107

4108

4109

4110

4111

4112

4113

4114

4115

4116

4117

4118

4119

5026

5027

5028

5029

5030

5031

5032

5033

5034

5035

5076

5077

5078

5079

5080

5081

5082

5083

5084

5085

8041

8042

8043

8044

8045

8046

8047

8048

8049

8050

5001

5002

5003

5004

5005

5006

5007

5008

5009

5010

5011

5012

5013

5014

5015

5056

5057

5058

5059

5060

5086

5087

5088

5089

5090

5091

5092

5093

5094

5095

5016

5017

5018

5019

5020

5021

5022

5023

5024

5025

5096

5097

5098

5099

5100

8001

8002

8003

8004

8005

8006

8007

8008

8009

8010

8011

8012

8013

8014

8015

8016

8017

8018

8019

8020

8021

8022

8023

8024

8025

8026

8027

8028

8029

8030

8031

8032

8033

8034

8035

8036

8037

8038

8039

8040

news-0112