Why tonight's launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 will be historic
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Thursday marks a major milestone in SpaceX鈥檚 roadmap to the stars: reusable rockets.
Weather permitting, a Falcon 9 will take off from Florida at 6:27 p.m. Eastern time Thursday evening with SES-10 communications satellite aboard. A successful launch would make history as the first booster rocket to return to orbit, a huge step in SpaceX鈥檚 quest to develop quick, cheap access to space.
The first stage booster rocket previously to the International Space Station in April 2016 before landing on a remote drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean, Space.com reports. SpaceX has successfully recovered eight (out of 13) rockets, but Thursday will be the first attempted re-launch.
The company plans to land the rocket on a barge again, opening up the possibility of the first third launch as well. SpaceX chief executive officer Elon Musk has said he expects Falcon 9s to eventually be capable of .
Luxembourg-based international communications satellite company SES volunteered to serve as guinea pig back in August of 2016. 鈥淗aving been the first commercial satellite operator to launch with SpaceX back in 2013, we are excited to once again be the first customer to launch on SpaceX's first ever mission using a flight-proven rocket,鈥 chief technology officer Martin Halliwell said in a statement. 鈥淲e believe reusable rockets will open up a , and make access to space more efficient in terms of cost and manifest management.鈥
Historically rockets have fallen into the ocean after use, resulting in the loss of a machine costing tens to hundreds of millions of dollars to build. In Mr. Musk鈥檚 eyes, no one would tolerate disposable cars or planes, so why should we be satisfied with throw-away rockets?
Reuse is 鈥渏ust as fundamental in rocketry as it is in other forms of transport 鈥 such as cars or planes or bicycles,鈥 said Musk at a briefing after a launch last year.
Rocket transportation, refueling, and refurbishing costs could eventually cost SpaceX as little as a few million dollars, significantly less than the current $60 million it charges to launch a Falcon 9. A company representative has said it hopes to eventually drop prices , although SES gets for the maiden re-voyage.
However, space is harsh and its economics are no exception. Unlike cars and bicycles, rockets need substantial testing and refurbishing between uses, and insurance for devices that run on controlled explosions . What's more, even SpaceX鈥檚 rockets aren鈥檛 fully reusable. The company recovers only the first of the two stages, although the first stage contains the main engines and most of the fuel, . Landing a rocket takes more fuel too, as much as a third, according to French space agency CNES (avoiding expensive flights all the way back to the launch site is one reason SpaceX lands in the ocean).
All these extra costs could make for razor-thin margins, squeezing aerospace companies to fly as often as possible. A joint French-Russian effort attempted to develop reusable boosters聽but found that even at 50 launches per year, the savings would be modest.
鈥淭丑别苍 鈥 plus or minus 15 percent,鈥 Christophe Bonnal, a senior expert at CNES, said to Space News. 鈥淲e have more to learn.鈥
Other space companies have cited 35-40 annual launches as the tipping point, and an ambitious launch-every-few-weeks schedule suggests SpaceX accountants have landed on a similar figure.
An accelerated launching schedule will help the company鈥檚 bottom line, as well as advance its 鈥渞educe, reuse, recycle" rocketry goals. After taking the fall and winter off to investigate an explosion, SpaceX currently has a backlog of more than 70 missions, worth more than $10 billion.
And the company is not resting on its laurels either. As the Falcon 9 reuse program gets underway, Space X is also rolling out a larger member of the Falcon family, the Falcon Heavy. This supercharged rocket will feature three potentially reusable first-stage Falcon 9 boosters strapped together, and will offer for $90 million dollars per launch. The company hopes it will fly in the , and will eventually aim for six flights per year.聽
As for full reusability, Musk suggests the second stage goes too far, too fast to make retrieval profitable. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 expect SpaceX鈥檚 Falcon line to have a reusable upper stage. With a kerosene-based system, the specific impulse isn鈥檛 really high enough to do that, and a lot of the missions we do for commercial satellite deployment are geostationary missions. So we鈥檙e really going very far out 鈥 , so to try and get something back from that is really difficult,鈥 he said in a 2014 MIT interview.
However, he still sees room for improvement when it comes to the rocket鈥檚 nose cone, which he would someday like to reuse as well: 鈥, because each of these costs several million,鈥 he said.