After Falcon 9 explosion, SpaceX gears up to try again on Jan 8

The Falcon rocket was to have launched a communications satellite for a Facebook-Eutelsat JV

SpaceX, Rocket
SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The rocket, carrying 11 communications satellites for Orbcomm is the first launch of the rocket since a failed mission to the International Space Station in June. Photo: AP/PTI
IANS Washington
Last Updated : Jan 03 2017 | 12:25 PM IST
Barely three months after one of its rockets blew up on the launchpad, destroying a $200 million Facebook satellite with it, SpaceX has said that it plans to try again on January 8.

The new launch date was included in a report on Monday that SpaceX released on the explosion of its Falcon 9 rocket at Cape Canaveral, Florida, on September 1, NBC news reported.

The "anomaly", in SpaceX's words, was caused when supercold helium led carbon fibres and aluminium to cool at different rates on the second of the rocket's two stages, the company said.

That opened the gaps between two layers of the overwrap, where liquid oxygen escaped and got trapped, it said.

That, in turn, caused one of the protective layers to "buckle", or fail. Static ignited the trapped oxygen, setting off a chain of catastrophic explosions, SpaceX said.

The Falcon rocket was to have launched an AMOS-6 communications satellite for a Facebook-Eutelsat joint-venture to extend Internet access to under-served parts of the world.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg said he was "deeply disappointed" by the loss but promised that "we will keep working until everyone has the opportunities this satellite would have provided".

SpaceX, a private space venture run by billionaire inventor Elon Musk, said Monday that its engineers have managed to rejig the configuration of the rocket's helium containers, moderating the temperature of the helium and presumably eliminating buckling in the overwrap layer.

If it's successful, the next launch, tentatively scheduled for Sunday at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, will put 10 satellites into orbit to upgrade and replace some of the units in the Iridium Communications satellite constellation, a system of 66 satellites that provide voice and data coverage around the world.
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First Published: Jan 03 2017 | 12:07 PM IST

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