Skip to main content

Is this the most beautiful rocket launch ever?

SpaceX chief Elon Musk has shared a video of an astonishingly beautiful Falcon 9 launch.

It shows the start of the NROL-186 mission, which took place last week and deployed next-generation spy satellites for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO).

Recommended Videos

Unmodified video https://t.co/vrIwDt2O5r

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 3, 2024

The two-stage Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Space Launch Complex 4 East at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California at 8:14 p.m. PT on Saturday, June 29. The Falcon 9 can be seen rising above the clouds against a sublime orange backdrop. Musk noted that the video is unmodified.

Last week’s NRO mission was the eighth flight for the first-stage Falcon 9 booster, which previously launched Crew-7, CRS-29, PACE, Transporter-10, EarthCARE, and two Starlink missions.

SpaceX also used the social media post to provide an update on its spaceflight program, revealing that the Falcon achieved 67 missions in the first six months of of this year, delivering nearly 900 metric tons to orbit in that time.

During the same period last year, the Falcon performed 43 launches, suggesting that SpaceX is on course to set a new launch record this year by beating its current calendar year tally of just shy of 100 launches, achieved in 2023.

SpaceX, which was founded in 2002, has painstakingly developed a system that enables it to reuse its first-stage boosters for multiple missions, paving the way for significantly lower launch costs and making orbital missions much more affordable for businesses and organizations. The system involves landing the first stage upright back on land or on a barge in the ocean shortly after the upper stage has been deployed to orbit. The booster is then checked over, refurbished, and launched again. Several of SpaceX’s Falcon first stages have now flown on more than 20 missions.

And with its ambitions set well beyond low-Earth orbit, the Musk-led company is currently testing its next-generation rocket, the mighty Starship, which is 10 times more powerful than the Falcon 9 and the most powerful rocket ever to fly. Once fully tested and licensed, the Starship is expected to carry crew and cargo to the moon and possibly Mars.

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)…
SpaceX to launch NASA’s Dragonfly drone mission to Titan
Caption: Artist’s concept of Dragonfly soaring over the dunes of Saturn’s moon Titan.

Over the last few years, the Ingenuity helicopter on Mars made history by proving it was possible to fly a rotorcraft on another planet. And soon NASA will take that concept one step further by launching a drone mission to explore an even more distant world: Saturn's icy moon of Titan.

The Dragonfly mission is set to explore Titan from the air, its eight rotors keeping it aloft as it moves through the thick atmosphere and passes over the rough, challenging terrain below. The aim is to look for potential habitability, studying the moon to work out if water-based or hydrocarbon-based life could ever have existed there.

Read more
SpaceX wants to significantly boost number of Starship launches in 2025
The Starship launching from Starbase in October 2024.

SpaceX could be targeting as many as 25 launches of its Starship rocket for 2025 as it readies the massive vehicle for crew and cargo trips to the moon, Mars, and possibly beyond.

The targeted launch cadence for the Starship, which comprises the first-stage Super Heavy booster and the upper-stage Starship spacecraft, appears in a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) draft environmental assessment for Starship missions from Boca Chica, Texas. The document primarily addresses the environmental considerations and regulatory processes linked to SpaceX's desire to increase the frequency of its Starship test flights from its Starbase facility in Boca Chica.

Read more
SpaceX image captures dramatic moment during latest Starship test
Stage separation of the Starship rocket captured by an onboard camera.

SpaceX recently completed the sixth test of the Starship, the most powerful rocket ever to fly.

In the days following Tuesday’s flight, the Elon Musk-led spaceflight company has been dropping various images of the mission on social media, with one of the latest pictures showing the dramatic moment when the upper-stage Starship spacecraft separated as planned from the first-stage Super Heavy booster.

Read more