Shropshire Star

Elon Musk says first test of Starship makes hopes of Mars trip ‘look real’

A short-test flight in Texas is seen as a step on an eventual journey to the Red Planet.

Published
Last updated
The planet Mars (Nasa/Esa/AP)

SpaceX launched a prototype of its Mars rocketship hundreds of feet into the air, then landed it upright in a successful test flight.

The flight lasted barely 45 seconds and reached just 500 feet at the southeastern tip of Texas near Brownsville, but was an important first for SpaceX’s Starship.

Some earlier tests ended in explosions on the pad.

“Mars is looking real,” SpaceX founder and chief executive Elon Musk tweeted after the short test.

“Progress is accelerating.”

Mr Musk said several more short hops are planned before a test version of Starship aims for a high altitude.

The latest test model is relatively plain: It stands a full-scale 100 feet (30 metres) tall and resembles a steel silo, or stretched-out can, with a cap on top.

The private company plans to launch reusable Starships on top of still-in-the-works rockets, carrying cargo or crew not only to low-Earth orbit but also the moon and Mr Musk’s most desirable destination, Mars.

The entire stack will stretch nearly 400 feet.

On Sunday, SpaceX safely returned two Nasa astronauts from the International Space Station following a two-month test flight.

Their Dragon capsule splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico off the Pensacola, Florida, coast.

SpaceX is now the only private company to fly people to and from orbit.

“We’re going to go to the moon.

“We’re going to have a base on the moon.

“We’re going to send people to Mars and make life multi-planetary,” Mr Musk said following splashdown.

“This day heralds a new age of space exploration.

“That’s what it’s all about.”

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.