Falcon 9 Stage 2 Anomaly After 300+ Missions! 🚀 | This Week In Spaceflight
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- Опубликовано: 6 авг 2024
- This week, SpaceX's Falcon 9 experienced a mission anomaly after over 300 flights. Europe's new Ariane 6 rocket had a successful first flight, with a few hiccups, and NASA's CHAPEA Mars mission simulation concluded after 378 days. Plus, India sends astronauts to the U.S. for ISS training, updates on the Starliner, and much more. Don't miss out on all the latest space news!
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🤵 Hosted by Elysia Segal (@elysia_segal)
🖋️ Written by Martijn Luinstra and Alejandra Alcantarilla Romera.
🎥 Footage from: Max Evans, D Wise, Jerry Pike, Space Coast Live
SpaceX, ESA, ISRO, NASA, ESA-YPSat, JAXA, Axiom Space, Gravitics, Łukasiewicz - Institute of Aviation, Astroscale, iSpace, Jonathan McDowell.
✂️ Edited by Ryan Caton (@DPodDophinPro).
💼 Produced by Kevin Michael Reed (@kmreed).
🔍 If you are interested in using footage from this video, please review our content use policy: www.nasaspaceflight.com/conte...
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A 44min delay in communications is nothing. Try having teenage children, messaging them is like talking to Voyager 1. It takes about 22hrs to get a reply back to anything sent to them plus when it does come back it's usually garbled. I'd prefer to put them into safe-mode but am concerned that the signal won't be received and acted on.
😂😂😭
Honestly, I’m not that surprised about the anomaly: even the most reliable equipment will fail/have faults after some time
This was brought up in Tim Dodds recent interview. Some failures are 1:10, some 1:100, and in this case, some are 1:350 ish
@@user-mu2xu9kp9rexactly, failures occur but how often they occur is what matters
Yeah. Crew Dragon is rated to a 1/270 chance of loss of crew for example.
I’m surprised it has gone over 300 flights without a failure. I think it’s phenomenal considering the high energy, high dynamics and extremes of environment it (and all rockets) operates in. I would hope the FAA is basically saying, find out what went wrong, if you can, tell us any actions you might take to try to prevent a recurrence and you may continue your satellite launches when you are ready. SpaceX is not in the business of putting its satellites in useless orbits and losing them. And they are absolutely not in the business of losing a crew, so they will do the best they can to figure this out.
I would “suspect” it’s a quality control issue. Some component or material not made up to par or someone assembled something not up to par, and it broke. Because the upper stages are brand new for every launch. None of them are individually flight proven, just a proven design.
So, I think government agencies insisting on a brand new booster for their missions may be putting their missions more at risk than using a young, flight-proven booster. Nonetheless, the upper stage can never be flown more than once, with F9/FH.
First off, Great earrings Elysia! And thank you for another awesome This Week In Spaceflight!!!!
The CHAPEA people looked ten years older when they came out of the habitat.
Namaste and good luck- LOST
Welcome to the Dharma Initiative (Department of Heuristics and Research on Material Applications) Initiative founded by Gerald and Karen DeGroot...
LOST was such a good show!
I would too, having a woman as my boss.
Seeing Elysia is always a good thing. It means it's Friday, and we survived at least one additional week of work ;-)
Yup. Love the rocket ear-rings!
Two second stages stuck in orbit in ONE week 😱
plus a Hyperbola-1 4th stage which failed.
POLAND CAN INTO SPACE
The only news i Trust! Glad to be part of this great Community! Much love from germany❤
"Hawthorne...we are venting something out into space. Definitely a gas of some sort...it's gotta be the oxygen."
Thanks Elysia and NSF team.
Mars astronauts are going to be very dedicated people.
they will be prob going to stay forever. or at least a very long time
who here would go as tourist if it were very affordable
@@apache937 I hope there will be a opportunity to go work there. I'm currently studiyng aereospace engineering and I hope one day I could go
Yes. Would you want to travel 6 months to Mars in 0g, spend a week or two on the surface at 1/3rd g, and then 6 more months at 0g back to Earth? Basically, a “much higher risk” stay on the ISS for a year. Or would you rather spend 6mos at 0g, 1 year at 1/3rd g, and 6 mos at 0g again? I don’t think anyone will be going until the mid-2030s, at the very earliest. Maybe not until 2040…if at all.
Personally, I would never go. 😬😄
The astronauts tested for this mission should have spend 6 months on the ISS, then 1 year in the habitat on Earth and then an immediate launch to the ISS for another 6 months, no vacation breaks for 2 years! That would seem brutal. 😂
Elysia, another great weekly wrap-up in space!
Welcome back Elysia. Missed your on the Friday updates
As interesting as Mars is; I don't think I would be up for the trip. "Dedicated" is definitely an understatement.
first Merlin anomaly in 2700+ instances of usage?
First MVac anomaly if it was the engine
Still highly reliable nonetheless
Great 👍 job.
Elysia is back! 😊
Flight 69: Ice.
Poland can into space 🇵🇱
Wow...❤❤❤
Good Annamoly❤
woah!
Better that happened on a non manned flight than a manned one. The satellites can be replaced, not people
And better to happen on a Starlink launch than NASA or other customer.
if this was a dragon mission and the failure was the exact same, the mission would have worked as the 2n stage only does 1 burn with no reflight needed
@@apache937
Right. The RUD occurred during the restart to circularize the initial orbit. However, Crew Dragon does that maneuver by itself.
Most important, Crew Dragon can safely abort during any portion of the launch, including during the second stage burn.
wow glad they added the markers back so i can skip the boring topics lol and watch ones i only want to but dont mind seeing elysia seagals gorgeous face at all
CBS News headline; "SpaceX Falcon Nine rocket suffers catastrophic malfunction during Starlink Launch." And that's why no one takes network news outlets seriously anymore.
but it *did* suffer a catastrophic malfunction. the satellites were deployed at too low of an altitude, and have already reentered the atmosphere, along with the failed upper stage
@@fosstera One of the stats looks like it made it.
A catastrophic malfunction would be a RUD on ascent, not a relight failure.
There's literally nothing wrong about that statement.
@@bryanillenbergThat’s still catastrophic
IMO catastrophic malfunction means it blew up and no longer usable. both of which is not the case here. It can be corrected even though the chance of that is slim according to Elon-but he is going to try to light the satellites little engines to put it in their correct orbits. Have we heard whether or not it worked? I don't think so.
Shuttle plushie?
Thanks for spaceX providing high resolution footage through this failure. This behaviour of buildup and leaks will be very informative for future visual effects work in space movies.
Incoming!
3:18 Is it just me or is the faring wobbling?
Yes, as it's made to be as light as possible. It's more rigid while attached to the other half and to the rocket, during ascent. After they are relased, they can be as flimsy as it gets, since they are expendable anyway.....
A real-life example of an eigenvalue
It's waving goodbye 🙂
Boh for ice in Merlin drinks.
0:29 o clock is fine
Im waiting for the first entity to say "Hey since you're throwing out this spacestation, we're just going to take it for
ourselves and use it."
Those Starlink hall effect thrusters have the thrust power of a mouse fart
Ah, so you saw that video, too? 😛
@@ChiakiNanami736HAHAHAH SAME FR FR ONG 🐁 💨
@@ChiakiNanami736 Yep :)
3:17 shooting stars meme
Namaste India
Elysia Segal is ADORABLE!
@ 11:16 so we are actually going to conform to Erdogan's call to stop calling Turkey, Turkey, and call it Turkiye instead.
In which case, I was thinking of going on a world tour of Francaise, Dutchland, España, Espanya, Espainia (it has three common languages), Norge, Italia, Magyarország, Al-‘Arabiyyah as Sa‘ūdiyyah (المملكة العربية السعودية), Hellas (Ελλάς) and Crna Gora Црна Гора.
You get the message. I'm not doing that, I'm just not. BTW some countries like South Africa have so many languages that these are all its names...Suid-Afrika, South Africa, iNingizimu Afrika, uMzantsi Afrika, Afrika-Borwa, Afrika Borwa, Aforika Borwa, Afurika Tshipembe, Afrika Dzonga, iNingizimu Afrika, iSewula Afrika. Best of luck with that.
Wow a real human voice - love it!
So the FAA is gonna ground Starliner for its thruster failures?
No, because that's outside FAA's overlook. Only the launch part, rocket and eventual capsule abort, is regulated by the FAA, not the transfer from orbit to ISS after release. They'll have to answer NASA for these issues. Perhaps that's also the reason why they are trying to gather more data, since they'll have a lot of questions to answer...
The landing will fall back within FAA's claws...
Elysia! I was wondering if she was gone for good or just on vacation.
So...did the CHAPEA test also include oxygen creation and food growing so they were self sustaining? Doesn't look like it as other 'Biosphere' attempts have resulted in failure. If food and oxygen are available from outside the habitat...what are they learning? There's no mental stress worrying that they'll suffocate or starve should their in house systems fail...so the results are tainted at best IMHO.
Exactly.
would I do the isolation thing...hell yes, sign me up right now
Not icicle earings...Ha!!
Those earings...😘😂🤣
Big Brother 378 days... but without the drama, voting people out and probably with a lot more stable participants... how long until we find out if they did something naughty like ferment beer or grow weed in there to pass the time? 🙂
ESA Ariana and Boeing Starliner have similar "great success", sent something to the orbit and need more time to come back.
Elmo trashing everything he touches again
While Elon is creating new, strange sounding companies, someone should suggest that he start Technora (fr. Planetes © ) Corp. to clean up space junk. He already has developed hardware designed to grab spacecraft (well, sort of).
Join the Submarine Force and you’ll get the same.
We, men, are used to 44 min delay when we talk with each other. This is something women don't understand. Sometimes we really need that 44 min delay. After all, men are from Mars.
12:12 By definition, there is no such thing as a private company in China, especially a space company.
And China spends tons of money to make sure the average person outside of China is ignorant of that fact.
Ariane's 2nd stage will do uncontrolled reentry, and payloads are designed to survive.
Likely to reach the earth surface?
11:16 Not convinced we should agree to President Erdogan's request to all start using his country's endonym rather than our exonym(s) for it. (Essentially, he wants us to call Turkey "toor-Kia", and to write it "Türkiye".)
Will he be calling Germany "Deutschland" and England "England" from now on?
Especially as it's basically just a pronunciation difference at the moment. So it's as if he already did call England "England" but in a Turkish accent and I demanded he switch to using an English accent for it, even if doing so involved using intonations/sounds that don't precisely map to any used in Turkish.
So, in the event of a catastrophic ISS failure, if it's use it or die, THEN it's ok to use Stuckliner. NOT comforting.
Hello 😉 👋🚀💕
2nd
Technically you're third but the comment in 2nd place was a bot so it doesn't really count.
First ?
Yes you 1st
It had to be the 69th mission of the year. Lol
I'm pretty sure that SpaceX doesn't need to be told to investigate a RUD but big brother needs to feel in control, I think.
I wonder if you'd still be happy if the upper stage comes down and lands on your house?
Big brother needs to know it not going to crash on anyone. Thus if you miss your approved mission you must have a return plan, just like that ship that almost made it to the moon but was sent back to Earth instead. And you don't get to fly again till you pass the board approval.
Because corporations are always so ready to investigate themselves and tell the truth. Given the stakes involved in space flight, I, for one, am glad "Big Brother" is involved.
It's part of the regulations. If you want them to be changed, you know what to do...
If the payload was deployed and each Starlink satellite can achieve the correct orbit using thrusters then there wasn’t a Loss of Mission failure. If the 2nd stage had catastrophically exploded it would fallen into the ocean with no threat to human life or property. Typically, the FAA launch license coverers the launch up to separation of the FS and the fly back of the FS, so not sure why the FAA is in the mix. I’m sure SpaceX would have investigated without the FAA mandate.
The payload must be delivered to the safe orbit else they want them return to earth plan. Star link only has a small amount of propulsion and needs to calculate if it can stay up and still de orbit when needed.
@@danc2014 May be a loss of mission after all if using the sat thrusters to achieve the correct orbit depletes the fuel supply shortening the sats mission life.
Per the regulations, there are nine conditions that would trigger a mishap investigation. Two of them are met on this mission which are unplanned loss of the vehicle and inability to complete the mission as licensed.
@@ale131296 Thanks for the clarification.
The CHAPEA habitat is somewhat (imo) discouraging when viewing the internal accommodations, furnishings, etc. Tables, chairs, kitchen, etc. wouldn't be transported to Mars or the moon if ISRU is to be. I'd expect to see very different furnishings than what the CHAPEA team had in their habitat. Just 🤔
The real stuff would be too flimsy to use in Earth gravity
@shanent5793 I meant style, usability, durability, and type of furnishings. More futuristic and at least resembling what ISRU manufacturing would produce. These accommodations won't be anything like what they'll be using on the moon and Mars.
WHY ARE THEY WEARING MASKS
Nao entendo nada do que ela fala mas tudo bem kekeksjkss
Funny how SpaceX get grounded but Boeing, ESA and the Chinese are allowed to fly at will even though their crap seems to either blow up or wonder off on its own and get lost. Surely the ESA rocket should be grounded until they find out why it didn’t to its deorbit it burn? It’s only fair right?
Apples to oranges and palm trees even
I mean they run under their own rules. Or in the case of China, no rules
Really, stop being such a fan boy. You should be rooting for all space organisations to succeed. You come across as very immature.
China is doing some amazing stuff in space now. Japan too and India. As for ESA they have a remarkable track record in producing, reliable, well built rockets. They also have very professional oversight and error correction processes.
The APU problem in its maiden flight will be sorted soon I expect. It's actually refreshing to see someone build a whole new rocket and have such a great success on the first flight. Very professional.
Still safer than 737
What will NASA say? You should deorbit those satellites. NOW.
Which satellites?
I'm starting to seriously wonder If the division of the f.A.A , which handles commercials space is actually being funded with chinese government , considering how long it takes them to make a decision
I would not be surprised.
Please front more of the shows, Ryan is only OK..... you give the post a better feel and less edgy IMHO.
the faa are such a bunch of jokers hope they can ask china about their issues why should this issue slow down their operations
You probably understand the FAA has no jurisdiction over China's spaceflight activities...
Jesus, really, it exploded in orbit! Why don't you go and sit atop one of them now before it has been thoroughly investigated and fixed.
Enough with this anomaly horseshit.....is this going to hit us???
Not likely
More specifically, it will probably disintegrate in the atmosphere, and won’t hit anything on land. Maybe a piece or two might touch the surface, but if so, probably on water.
@@EMichaelBall haha you totally missed the movie reference
No amount of money could get me to live on Mars.
NO payload LOST, Starlink Satellite deployed on lower altitude, but Starlink has ION Thrusters, to maneuver to a higher Altitude. MERLIN single ENGINE on 19th flight working GOOD, but ICE CREAM seen on VIDEO. Possible Fuel LEAK, time for Space X, to upgrade their plumbing pipes.
There's no way humans can survive on Mars
. .
We cannot survive the vacuum of space
We will survive and thrive and we will turn Mars into a garden.
Sounds life the glove has been throw down.
Have to conquer cancer first.
@@williamcase426 or underwater. That's what technology is for.
this will mark the end of spacex!
Low tier bait