It marked the fourth botched at-sea return landing attempt for Elon Musk's privately owned Space Exploration Technologies, though a Falcon main-stage rocket did achieve a successful ground-based touchdown after soaring back to Earth from a less demanding launch in December. The latest try occurred after four SpaceX launch delays stretching back to February 24.
On Friday, the 23-storey-tall Falcon 9 bolted off its seaside launch pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station as scheduled. A half-hour later it completed the chief goal of its mission, putting the Boeing-built satellite, owned by Luxembourg-based SES SA, into orbit more than 40,600 km above Earth.
On its way up, the rocket's first-stage booster separated as planned, turned around and headed toward a platform floating about 645 km off Florida's east coast. The rocket found its target, but its velocity proved too great to allow for a safe landing on the drone barge.
"Rocket landed hard," Musk, the founder and CEO of SpaceX, said in a Twitter message more than an hour after blastoff. "Didn't expect this one to work ... but next flight has a good chance."
The ability to safely and reliably return the rocket's main stage to a landing pad at sea has been a key hurdle in Musk's quest to develop a relatively cheap, reusable launch vehicle.
The rocket flying on Friday faced a particularly challenging mission to deliver the 5,721 kg satellite into an orbit more than 100 times higher than where the International Space Station flies. The speed required to achieve that feat meant the rocket was going too fast to even attempt a ground landing.
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