Skip to main content

SpaceX Starship Aces 10th Flight, Takes Major Step Toward Reusability


SpaceX's massive Starship rocket aced its 10th test flight on Aug. 26, 2025. In a dramatic comeback, the 400-foot stainless-steel launcher hit every target after a string of failures. SpaceX engineers noted it was “a significant step forward in developing the world's first fully reusable launch vehicle” – and indeed every major objective was met. After roaring off the pad, Starship climbed as planned, then returned mostly intact from orbit (aside from some expected chunk losses on re-entry) to splash down in the Pacific. This success is a big leap toward Elon Musk's goal of rockets that can fly again and again to the Moon, Mars and beyond.

Smooth Staging, Soaring Re-entry

According to the post-launch update from SpaceX, with 33 Raptor engines, Starship rocket launched successfully. After separating from the booster and performing a controlled descent burn, it completed its hot-stage separation. Eight dummy Starlink satellites, the first payload ever carried by Starship, were later launched into space by the upper stage.

In orbit, the rocket also rekindled one of its six engines. Despite the removal of some scorched debris during the atmospheric plunge, Starship started its reentry 45 minutes after launch. The craft held together long enough to light its engines for a soft landing burn and splashdown in the Indian Ocean, even though some debris peeled off during the plunge.

Eyes on Mars and Earth Orbit

Larger Starship V3, V4 models with up to 42 Raptor engines are set to be launched by SpaceX in an effort to assist humanity in "settling Mars." In order to demonstrate their ability to reach the Red Planet, the company is also planning an uncrewed landing on Mars as early as 2026, using a minimal lander.

Every test, including Flight 10, aims to gather as much information as possible to guide the designs of the Starships of the future. In order to enable astronauts to dock Orion to a Starship in lunar orbit and ride it down to the Moon's surface, NASA has selected a variant of Starship for its Artemis lunar lander. This reusability may result in lower expenses and higher launch rates.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Hubble Uncovers Multi-Age Stars in Ancient Cluster, Reshaping Galaxy Origins

Astronomers call ancient star clusters like NGC 1786 “time capsules” for their galaxy, preserving some of its oldest stars. A new image from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope offers an unprecedented close-up of this dense cluster 160,000 light-years away in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Hubble's data show that NGC 1786 contains stars of different ages – a surprising find, since such clusters were once thought to hold a single stellar generation. This multi-age discovery is reshaping our view of how galaxies built their first stars, and suggests more complex early history. Mixed-Age Stars in a Galactic Time Capsule According to the official source, this Hubble image shows the globular cluster NGC 1786, a ball of densely packed stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud about 160,000 light-years from Earth. Astronomers captured this picture as part of a program comparing ancient clusters in nearby dwarf galaxies (like the LMC) with clusters in our own Milky Way. The surprising discovery is th...

CSIRO Uses Quantum AI to Revolutionize Semiconductor Design

Researchers at Australia's CSIRO have achieved a world-first demonstration of quantum machine learning in semiconductor fabrication. The quantum-enhanced model outperformed conventional AI methods and could reshape how microchips are designed. The team focused on modeling a crucial—but hard to predict—property called “Ohmic contact” resistance, which measures how easily current flows where metal meets a semiconductor. They analysed 159 experimental samples from advanced gallium nitride (GaN) transistors (known for high power/high-frequency performance). By combining a quantum processing layer with a final classical regression step, the model extracted subtle patterns that traditional approaches had missed. Tackling a difficult design problem According to the study, the CSIRO researchers first encoded many fabrication variables (like gas mixtures and annealing times) per device and used principal component analysis (PCA) to shrink 37 parameters down to the five most important ones. ...

A Planet with a Death Wish: How HIP 67522 b Is Forcing Its Star to Explode

Scientists have caught a planet with a death wish, which is an alien world, orbiting very near to its star, and so speedy that it is causing the star to go to its death with bursting explosions. HIP 67522 b is the planet, and it is of the same size as Jupiter with a seven-day orbit around its host star. These orbits are disturbing the magnetic field of the star and causing enormous blasting eruptions to blow back the planet and make it wrinkled. This is the first time that a planet is influencing the host star, as the astronomers reported in a study published on July 2, 2025, in the Journal Nature. A Planet with a Death Wish: HIP 67522 b's Fiery Orbit As per the study by NASA, Ekaterina Ilin, the first author of the study and an astrophysicist at the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy, said that the planet was observed to trigger the energetic flares. It has been predicted by the scientists that the waves are setting off explosions that are going to happen. Magnetic Chaos: P...