SpaceX made history Tuesday afternoon by launching its first Falcon Heavy—and Elon Musk’s personal Tesla Roadster—into space, ushering in a new era for the aerospace company.
At 3:45 pm EDT, and with just 15 minutes left in today’s launch window, the Falcon Heavy thundered upwards from launchpad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, leaving a billowing trail of smoke behind it.
Thousands of onlookers cheered on as the rocket lifted off and drifted out of view. Cameras showed the “core” section of the rocket shedding its two Falcon 9 boosters approximately three minutes after lift off, both of which managed to make successful landings back on Earth. Following a flip maneuver, the late stage booster jettisoned its cargo, performing an atmospheric re-entry prior to its own vertical landing attempt on the barge, Of Course I Still Love You. The fate of the core is still not known.
In a tweet, SpaceX said the “second stage engine cutoff as planned,” with Elon Musk adding that the upper stage “will spend 5 hours getting zapped in Van Allen belts & then attempt final burn for Mars.”
More powerful rockets have been launched before, including the Saturn V rocket that was used during the Apollo missions, but the Falcon Heavy is now the most powerful operational rocket in the world. This beast can generate more than five million pounds of thrust at liftoff, and carry 141,000 pounds of cargo to low Earth orbit. SpaceX originally designed the rocket to carry humans into space, including potential missions to Mars, but Musk now says the Falcon Heavy will never involve human passengers—a task that will be delegated to a larger space-transportation system called the Big Falcon Rocket, or BFR, which is currently in development.
True to his word, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk shot his Tesla Roadster into space, along with a dummy named Starman behind the wheel. The car is headed towards an elliptical orbit that will see it drift in space for hundreds of millions of years. (a live view of Starman can be seen here)
It’s too early to know if everything went exactly as SpaceX planned, but given fears of an explosion or crash, today’s events must be considered a big success. The Elon Musk-led company can now prepare for future launches, including commercial contracts that could see a second launch in just a few months.
Here’s the launch in its entirety.
Looking ahead, SpaceX can now proceed with its first commercial and U.S. Department of Defense contracts, which could happen in the next several months.
More to come as this is a developing story.