Watch the plasma build up around SpaceX Starship during its atmospheric re-entry on March 14, 2024. Watch the launch: www.space.com/spacex-starship... Credit: SpaceX
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@Byehk2047Ай бұрын
Is this the first ever live broadcast of spaceship re-entry in human history
@bobriquardo5317Ай бұрын
No the Stardust in 1999 was broadcast on live TV. This is by far the best camera angle and video quality tho.
@glenchapman3899Ай бұрын
Well we only saw the start of the reentry. Once that plasma forming around the ship gets hot enough you can not get any sort of signal through it sadly
@2ndfloorsongsАй бұрын
@@glenchapman3899Maybe yes, maybe no. For something as large as Starship that is as yet to be determined.
@MapedModАй бұрын
Just few weeks ago we had a reentry video of a private satellite - Varda W-1.
@jantjarks7946Ай бұрын
@@glenchapman3899 True for ground stations due to the wake around the reentry vehicle. Satellites above a reentry vehicle however don't have this issue. Thus by taking a corner it shouldn't be an issue. Even though it requires tweaking.
@lovescience9004Ай бұрын
The plasma during reentry, damn It's magnificent 🤩🤩
@user-wz8yy6eg9wАй бұрын
I got tingling sensation on my foot watching this...
@tonymackenzie9282Ай бұрын
Bahahahaha fairy tales
@Wheatthin21Ай бұрын
@@tonymackenzie9282 Saw this launch from my house east of Brownsville, these are some damn real fairytales!
@Benjamin-ir6ocАй бұрын
What I could never understand is, if we lose communication at these heights,how was it possible to stay with communications when men apparently went to the moon, can anyone answer that? Old technology great communication with Apollo, newer tech we lose communication, makes we wonder!! Lies and more lies???
@user-cr4ru3kw7qАй бұрын
@@Benjamin-ir6oc Проблема не в высоте, а в том, что плазма не пропускает радиосигнал, отгораживая корабль от земли. Спутники Старлинк находятся выше корабля, им плазма не мешает принять сигнал. Вас в Америке (или откуда ты там) вообще в школе ничему не учат?
@MayonaiseSailor29 күн бұрын
watching a 10 story building tumble uncontrolled into earths atmosphere is one hell of a show :D
@KanaGotManaАй бұрын
I'm a 35-year-old man Sitting in his garage alone watching this footage and it has brought me to tears. How could you not find something like this poetic and beautiful. It's truly a monumental step foreward in the evolution of space flight. Im proud of all the courageous and incredibly dedicated men and women involved in this astronomical achievement.
@BirdTalk13Ай бұрын
I am 100% with you on this. Beautiful, ethereal, frightening, wondrous and amazing.
@marvinunderwood7676Ай бұрын
So what are you flat Earthers going to say now
@Based_Dept.Ай бұрын
Lol too bad you plebs will never go to space
@carbonEYE007Ай бұрын
Imagine thinking you are being told the truth about this. You are not.
@Californians_go_homeАй бұрын
Stop crying. You’re 35 and almost an adult.
@Laurie473Ай бұрын
Yeah... Seeing the Plasma wave start forming in real time LIVE on Starship's camera, is DEFINATELY a highlight of 2024 for me, just unbelievable !! 🤩
@wh0586Ай бұрын
It was out of control and blew up lol.. SpaceX fails to do properly what we have done already some 60 years ago
@Muonium17 күн бұрын
@@wh0586 When the wise man points at the moon, the self-indulgent fool critiques his finger.
@00leaveralone5 күн бұрын
@@Muonium1why is there not some kind of light or visible indicator to prove to all men that humankind made it to the moon. It would’ve been so easy considering the level of importance. I call TOTAL BULLSHIT. You go to the moon in your mind; right?
@noobes17 сағат бұрын
@@wh0586 remember that it's the heaviest spacecraft ever. Isn't testing their rockets a good way to ensure everything will be safe in the future use?
@mundanestuffАй бұрын
3:13 is incredible, the moment the plasma becomes visible is the coolest
@nicolascorre1erАй бұрын
Crossing the Karman line in all its glory
@renzorsАй бұрын
hotest
@jayobeeАй бұрын
hottest i would argue ;)
@juanpasg2108Ай бұрын
I kept my mouth open for like 3 minutes, I couldn't believe what my eyes were seeing!!
@wilde1049Ай бұрын
@@nicolascorre1eryes I recall reading this in a Dan Dare comic in the 1950s 😊
@Stevedrums741Ай бұрын
I've very little idea of what I'm watching but know enough to know that this is incredible.
@koolerpureАй бұрын
Greatest footage of reentry ever recorded. It’s so beautiful
@SensibleBotАй бұрын
REAL TIME PLASMA 🤩😎
@STV-H4HАй бұрын
People, please don’t forget to take a moment out of your busy schedule to donate plasma, it’s desperately needed as you see it being burned faster than it can be regenerated
@joecruiserАй бұрын
@@STV-H4H idiotic
@Suntoria236Ай бұрын
3:18 that was amazing
@CausticLemons7Ай бұрын
@@STV-H4H For just a few ounces of plasma donated you can change the life of a Starship in need.
@misteryudonnomeАй бұрын
I am a regular plasma donor but I thought they used it to make big screen plasma t.v.'s...🤔 I really think they should be giving more $ to the donor. Without them there is nothing... Don't be so greedy! please. Thank you.
@quazar5017Ай бұрын
had a terrible day so far, but this lit me up instantly
@alexandersaksvoll5373Ай бұрын
same here pal. lets celebrate the smal wins life gives us!
@crono3339Ай бұрын
Man I saw a tornado for the first time today, INSANE! Nobody got hurt. But seeing this reentry is pretty damn awesome.
@Tensho_CАй бұрын
@@crono3339 damn, that makes two firsts in a single day!
@Marrrrrko47Ай бұрын
It lit up S28 as well :)
@davidm8966Ай бұрын
Pun intended? 😅
@frankendoodle6379Ай бұрын
Re-entry through Earth's atmosphere has always been so fascinating. Thanks for this incredible view!
@KrispyAimAssistАй бұрын
I saw this live it was incredible! Well done to the engineers at Space X
@alonenjerseyАй бұрын
First piece of very good news I've heard this morning! Three cheers to everyone involve!
@6ofwrev704Ай бұрын
Most incredible re-entry footage to date. I'm so glad I got to witness this today.
@fabr5747Ай бұрын
Really? They failed again ! What about those footages? And without failure unlike Elon X kzbin.info/www/bejne/i2mbda2QmNiomNU
@tgstudio85Ай бұрын
@@fabr5747 And so what, they will try again as always. They failed plenty of times with their Falcon 9 rockets and nowadays they land them perfectly. It's called progress kiddo.
@fabr5747Ай бұрын
@@tgstudio85 And it was a new technology, justifying failures... Not the case here. No need to launch a rocket to check if all engine get turned on for example...
@moonashaАй бұрын
@@fabr5747 bruh what are you on about? the entirety of starship is new technology. The thermal tiles, the hot gas thrusters, the reentry regime, the staging. Literally everything. This test was a success because they gained data, they literally have 4 more rockets lined up ready to go. They are disposable, each rocket probably costs less than ONE engine on the SLS/space shuttle.
@fabr5747Ай бұрын
@@moonasha It's funny how Musk lovers are finding him to be such a genius. - the tiles are basically the 1996 EATB coated with what coated the last years of the shuttles. And they are right to use it, it's already demonstrated and understood. But nothing new here. Calling failure a success is ridiculous. He should already be on Mars according to his 2016 declarations. P.S. How many flights for the shuttle? Isn't also Musky trying to sell reusable? So now he is a genius because he is crashing reusable rockets?
@brianwaldo2642Ай бұрын
I’m old enough to remember watching the first televised launch and re-entry of the Mercury spacecraft with John Glenn in 1962. We didn’t get to see much, but what we did was incredible. Seeing this video of re-entry from outside of the craft is something I never expected I’d ever witness. It begs the question, what comes next?
@BirdTalk13Ай бұрын
I am the same as you. I too never thought I’d live to see such amazing space engineering. Seeing the plasma form was ethereal and beautiful.
@joebonomono5078Ай бұрын
Old FKR here, same, loving me some plasma also, until today it's been like bigfoot, heard of it, never seen it. I try to watch as many launches as I can, I'm ready for whatever it is that comes next. The future that was predicted for my generation is finally happening and I'm down for it.
@charles_prestonАй бұрын
Probably more........ of the same nonsense. AI is BS.
@Bright_Light_LoveАй бұрын
@@charles_preston NPC?
@charles_prestonАй бұрын
@@Bright_Light_Love Garbage.
@MD-jo9mhАй бұрын
What a gorgeous compliment of engineering and technology. Way to go SpaceX! 👍👍👍
@gekiryudojoАй бұрын
Way to go away to go away to go away to go away to go away to go squeak squeak squeak
@jayevday2323 күн бұрын
It never left our atmosphere!
@Ethan_Roberts22 күн бұрын
It did
@unrealmango19 күн бұрын
@@Ethan_Roberts Nope!
@aservantinbabylon10 күн бұрын
Cause it can't.....just like always.....
@emanu16742 күн бұрын
Every day when i wake up i thank God for being smart and not an useless and uncultured insect like you people.
@emanu16742 күн бұрын
@@aservantinbabylon Are you blind, stupid or both? Space starts at 100km, Starship wen over 120. it 100 went to space. I'm so glad i'm smart and not stupid like you all.
@ClemensAliveАй бұрын
This camera angle gives me so damn "Interstellar" vibes... *goose bumps* *hears organ plying* "It's not possible." "No, it's necessary."
@profiskipinternational4402Ай бұрын
Mindboggling .... hits hard emotionally to see the level of engineering and sciences behind to deal with the extreme stress factors and do proper computer calculations for a controlled tumbling. Unbelievable if not seen with own eyes. Congrats to all who had been involved to make this outstanding project working.
@andrewwilliams941922 күн бұрын
lol
@brantuga9915Ай бұрын
SPACEX is Insane they’re doing things out of movies we never thought were possible.
@chrishooge3442Ай бұрын
I see it as an example of risk aversion hampering progress. NASA is very risk averse. SpaceX took the risks of losing rockets on landing that would've otherwise been disposed of on reentry anyway.
@fixplanesАй бұрын
We did this in the 50's 60's 70's 80's 90's 2000's etc. Fantastic to see it happening live though. Views we've never had before.
@Chris-bg8mkАй бұрын
Not at anywhere near this scale. And not reusable, minus shuttle, which was only slightly reusable
@Antagon666Ай бұрын
@Chris-bg8mk you call "landing" a booster at 3x speed of sound and subsequently exploding upper stage a "reusable" rocket ?
@chrishooge3442Ай бұрын
@@Antagon666 It's only the 3rd attempt. SpaceX lost 18 rockets before landing the first. They now have 283 landings in 294 attempts with many boosters now approaching or exceeding 10 landings. Patience, Grasshopper.
@aeh5159Ай бұрын
Mesmerizing just so beautiful to see the planet slowly revealing in the distance then just wow.
@robertpearlman6089Ай бұрын
Absolutely incredible. Throughout the history of space travel, the friction from encountering the molecules in the atmosphere produces the plasma we see in this video.
@TheBestOfSwedenАй бұрын
Wow. Just insane views! Congrats SpaceX
@jeffhaggarty9879Ай бұрын
Is it normal to congratulate one three complete failures in a row?
@jacobd1432Ай бұрын
Sever propellant leakage leading to uncontrolled tumble and atmospheric breakup after a failed loading bay test and failed in flight engine ignition? Mmm great success.
@TovalokodoncАй бұрын
@@jeffhaggarty9879Most companies can't even get their rockets to land and mind you, this is the most powerful rocket in human history. If it were so easy as you imagine 😂😂
@TovalokodoncАй бұрын
@@jacobd1432Other completed milestones and valuable data...
@jahoyhoy9097Ай бұрын
@@jeffhaggarty9879 “Failure is success in progress.” -Albert Einstein
@ratratrat59Ай бұрын
I love the excitement that the control surfaces move.
@paulis7319Ай бұрын
Right? It's like a bunch of kids watching an automatic door for the first time. 🤣
@ratratrat59Ай бұрын
@@paulis7319 Yes! These kids make the end of the world bearable. Laughing until I die.
@ervinjackson326125 күн бұрын
Boy, I love stuff like this. I used to always be into science when I was a kid so I spent all my time watching stuff like this and just seeing what people can do. All knowledge belong to everybody.
@hardrockminer-50Ай бұрын
😮I'm impressed with the way these spokespeople understand and are able to communicate the mission of the flights.
@Minimalici0usАй бұрын
What an era to be alive 🫡
@CHMichaelАй бұрын
Remember the space shuttle?
@Daeon108Ай бұрын
Singularity is possible in this era, escape velocity of life span is possible in this era, AI sentience is possible in this era. It is ineed a wild time to be alive.
@jeremywallis1960Ай бұрын
So easily fooled by CGI you are...
@blackknight4996Ай бұрын
You missed the 50 years ago Hollywood moon landing .... LOL
@nufan4521Ай бұрын
@CHMichael lowering the cost per kg to launch material in space will be the game changer.
@crisrampante647Ай бұрын
The power of the flap's actuators is insane. They are able to push against the force of the atmosphere at such velocities
@svenp6504Ай бұрын
I don't think it's that much force at that height. Such a thin atmosphere. I think that's why they had trouble controlling the ship.
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
They aren't that powerful. The atmosphere is so thin at 100km it would be considered a pretty good vacuum on the ground.
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
@@DVSFish At 80km altitude air density is only 0.00001846kg/m^3. At 7200 m/s that results in an aerodynamic pressure of 0.132 N/m^2 which is equivalent to 0.1 m/s at sea level. Not even a gentle breeze.
@kayenne221Ай бұрын
Grow up ffs lol
@DVSFishАй бұрын
@@stargazer7644Apologies, I used a completely wrong value for density at that altitude. This is much closer to correct (I ended up with 7km/h with revised calc)
@vazap8662Ай бұрын
This is one of the most amazing pieces of footage I've ever seen.
@coryleblancАй бұрын
its fake
@vazap8662Ай бұрын
@@coryleblancmmm I’m afraid it’s not. It’s widely documented. Also, I’ve worked in VFX since early 90s.. I’m usually on the sceptical side. But not here.
@bensonnamikasa5894Ай бұрын
Incredible, that's how re-entry looks like from space, it's beautiful to view our home from that distance.
@joecruiserАй бұрын
Great outcome today, congrats to SpaceX! Progress in leaps and bounds. Excellent engineering, fast tracked development and prototype test run.
@fabr5747Ай бұрын
Fast track? They are delayed by A LOT ! According to December 2020 goals: - 2022 Q4 Propellant transfer test, Q4 2022, still hasn't happened - 2023 Q2, long duration flight, still hasn't happened - 2024 Q1, uncrewed lunar landing www.reddit.com/r/SpaceXLounge/comments/qujnsi/proposed_spacex_hls_schedule_source_nasa_oig/ Come on, don't say "fast tracked" when it's delayed like crazy !
@fldiggerАй бұрын
There was nothing great about a massive failure of technology that was already proved before most fan-boys were born.
@jeffhaggarty9879Ай бұрын
Where? Booster STILL can't return or be controlled. Couldn't control vehicle once it reached orbit properly. Couldn't control it during re-entry. It is still amateur hour.
@joecruiserАй бұрын
@@jeffhaggarty9879 Where? In my Rocket Engineering career and experience of 25 years. There are some very good Engineering degrees available at some Universities......
@fabr5747Ай бұрын
@@jeffhaggarty9879 I agree with you. They had a fuel leak, and because they have no solution to control it in those situations, that's the result. Tiles facing the stars during reentry was funny. I wish you to not be American, cause that's your tax money going into smoke.
@nitzneymann3977Ай бұрын
Seeing the Plasma is freakin the coolest!! 😮😍
@user-vv2pf1sy4mАй бұрын
freakin the HOTTEST haha
@RaNdOm-ev5knАй бұрын
Man the happiness in the voice of all the workers
@ashish31945Ай бұрын
Wow. SpaceX and Starlink providing exciting videos of Starships re-entry videos. Truly amazing. Chao. Keep Going!
@musk-eteer9898Ай бұрын
what a historical moment and a giant leap for mankind
@user-tb5lw9fb7kАй бұрын
Kind of like the fake moon landing when Nixon was talking on his phone. lol...
@chaosengine3772Ай бұрын
Been there, done that... In this reality.
@thoos192Ай бұрын
At least one expensive leap for the taxpayers. 1 billion dollars for Elons failing toys, that could have been spent on welfare instead
@alhrocksАй бұрын
Money should never be spent on people who don't want to work.@@thoos192
@ELDERGODDDАй бұрын
@@user-tb5lw9fb7kthey used unified s band radio frequency using independent satellites, not hard, do better 👍
@spacecraze5513Ай бұрын
what a beautiful peice of engineering im glad i tuned in for this launch and reentry what a success.
It's amazing that this is actually the real reentry and not a 3D animation!
@user-uc2ox7fl6xАй бұрын
Сейчас набегут свидетели секты "Адептов небывания американцев на Луне" и заявят, что это Маску в Голливуде сняли! )))
@hawkdslАй бұрын
Some of those 3d animations were pretty spot on, which is amazing itself.
@jeremywallis1960Ай бұрын
And you know that how?
@hawkdslАй бұрын
@@jeremywallis1960and that is the first step to insanity. "Nothing is real" is a deep hole to hades.
@arcosprey4811Ай бұрын
@@hawkdslthe one with purple plasma from a while back was SPOT ON
@Virvum_JuggernautАй бұрын
This footage is nothing less than a revelation to my discerning eyes. The clarity of picture made me realise just how accurate the digital effects artists are when designing the space visuals in Sci-Fi movies, because the friction burn depicted in the reality of the Starship re-entry almost appears fake looking. Edit : The fundamentals witnessed in this genuine SPACE X Starship re-entry are indiscernible from today’s digital imagery creations.
@rleriche5044Ай бұрын
Which movie/s are you referring to?
@Virvum_JuggernautАй бұрын
@@rleriche5044 There are many films which accurately depict the effects of friction burn upon re-entry into a planet’s atmosphere : APOLLO 13 • GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY • STAR TREK : GENERATIONS • STAR TREK : BEYOND • STAR WARS : REVENGE OF THE SITH • LIFE • MAN OF STEEL • AD ASTRA
@Sarbet888Ай бұрын
This picture should be all over the news, absolutely breathtaking entry.
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
It was an immense failure. Why celebrate it?
@James_Ford4815Ай бұрын
ABSOLUTLY AMAZING!!!!
@Creed109Ай бұрын
Congrats SpaceX. I hope they managed to gain valuable data during the reentry part since any signal is block out by the plasma.
@bradmcduffie947Ай бұрын
No, the signal is fine. We placed a phone call to the moon in 1969. We have signal. Follow the science.
@ZFilms11Ай бұрын
@@bradmcduffie947 It's reentry, are you dense?
@bradmcduffie947Ай бұрын
@@ZFilms11 do you have a question about density?
@ZFilms11Ай бұрын
@@bradmcduffie947 Of you, yes.
@bradmcduffie947Ай бұрын
@@ZFilms11 the density of plasma?
@TheJayfunckАй бұрын
I love how this format sounds like it’s a sporting event with a couple of commentators and the crowd cheering in the background.
@lcarrscottishtxnАй бұрын
Technology is fantastic! 2600° and that camera keeps working. Leave my phone in the sun for three minutes and I can’t send a text.😂😂
@user-mv7wu2vm5rАй бұрын
The data is the payload. Very nicely put.
@owusuafriyiedennis4386Ай бұрын
Yes
@graysoceanworld5662Ай бұрын
I was so excited when I watched the ship reenter the atmosphere! It was just incredible! Go Starship!
@blackknight4996Ай бұрын
And United Snakes said they went to the moon 50 years ago back and forth many times ....LOL ....
@aryankuhar1171Ай бұрын
@@blackknight4996 How's that even related to this? 😂😂
@blackknight4996Ай бұрын
@@tonywood3660 If you have never left earth, you could stay alive quite easily.
@blackknight4996Ай бұрын
@@aryankuhar1171 50 years later today you still fail you want us to believe you did go to the Moon... LoL 🤣🤣
@aryankuhar1171Ай бұрын
@@blackknight4996 when did they failed?? Can you enlighten us.... Edit : give me one valid & proper reason for not believing in the moon landings
@TheZenbuddaАй бұрын
Omg I was in love with her voice then saw her and fell in love again. ❤
@user-xx8rn5yg9g22 күн бұрын
I knew I'd find a perv forum...she knows the space program what can she say about biology?
@zhenren9703Ай бұрын
Thats a lot of data regardless of the loss. Nice view too. Amazing job.
@RealTalkWithSSGАй бұрын
Wow, this is the first time we have views of plasma formation from outside a spacecraft!! Incredibly beautiful and terrifying at the same time!!
@jeremywallis1960Ай бұрын
Yeah, they added that in the CGI to keep you sheep entertained...
@petachad420Ай бұрын
@@jeremywallis1960 I think they've added your brain in CGI brother
@beaynАй бұрын
Did no one ever put an SD card in the camera on prior flights and look at it later?
@beaynАй бұрын
@@jeremywallis1960 Houston we have a flat-earther here.
@gabrielfalcao2952Ай бұрын
@@beayn Not the same thing. Also, all previous ships were too small for that, and having a bulky, termally-protected camera on the outside would cause more harm than good. The closest we had were the views from inside Soyuz's windows (tiny views of brief flashes) and the Orion's return (also from a window, but looking back to the tail).
@felipemurillo3020Ай бұрын
This is so aweseme. Go SpaceX, Elon and USA!!
@user-vc6ki9pb3zАй бұрын
Wow wow wow it's so amazing thanks for this beautiful actual footage. Cebu Philippines
@coryleblancАй бұрын
lel?
@ShareCraftIdeasАй бұрын
Imagine seeing this with a VR headset, being able to turn around and see everything. What a moment.
@lk29392Ай бұрын
That is absolutely unbelievable - one of the most incredible things I've ever seen. Literally caused me to scream in amazement and brought tears to my eyes it was so incredible.
@StavrosDalekАй бұрын
I know what you mean, I was pretty choked up too. Also Incredible video tech that we could see all this without any video glitches. Oh and the Falcon 9 landings on their pads never get boring either 😃
@RealTalkWithSSGАй бұрын
Same!!! ❤❤
@w9gbАй бұрын
Easier when your Internet service (Starlink) is Above; and you have NASA TDRS at geostationary orbit as backup/primary. They also had the SpaceX Falcon 9 ground stations. I heard a call-out for the African ground station.
@Darth_Revan25Ай бұрын
It was the light jazz in the cruising phase that was super lovely in my opinion. Totally fitting and calming.
@stephenanderson5643Ай бұрын
Yawnnnnnnnnn
@scottydont2549Ай бұрын
I can’t stop watching this. Some of the most spectacular space footage ever recorded.
@allezlesrougesАй бұрын
What!?
@timothyandrewnielsenАй бұрын
Proves that the Earth is flat
@yodamorpheus3128Ай бұрын
@@timothyandrewnielsenhow so?
@user-zp5xt8em6lАй бұрын
@@timothyandrewnielsen you're joking... Right???
@oliverearnshaw6189Ай бұрын
Fake
@Ryan_404Ай бұрын
The cult-like competition to see who can clap loudest even as the starship disintegrates is concerning.
@dicksledge2447Ай бұрын
I don't remember deeming Columbia's reentry a success, yet somehow this is.
@robertjustin9638Ай бұрын
It's because it's fake and they're paid to do it
@mariapeagler2667Ай бұрын
Thank you SpaceX for this incredible view of re-entry. I remember being in school 2nd grade and watching astronauts walk on the moon on a black and white television. Never though I'd see anything like this.
@coloradocrawler2010Ай бұрын
That thing was raining broken tiles at ~2:10. Also, there is one moment where the ship was not aligned with the airstream and was definitely baking stainless steel on the upper left side. It didn’t seem like the ship was fully under control.
@RC_EngineeringАй бұрын
Agreed! Spacex is working outside of known engineering. I'm excited to see the next try!
@arcaipekyun4232Ай бұрын
duh, it wasn't under proper control for a long time during its coast phase. That's something to be fixed for the next time. I did hear during the stream they had problems with the attitude control system.
@gamers-xh3ucАй бұрын
True you can see it tumbling even in re-entry at first it wasnt that bad but when it started to go lower the atmosphere was so strong that probably exploded it
@codeforce5556Ай бұрын
@@RC_Engineering😂
@user-fc2xg5iz7yАй бұрын
@@arcaipekyun4232 DUH
@Rick-vm8blАй бұрын
One thing I dont think people have realised here, it was on its side for some of this. Meaning the full brunt of the heat was hitting a non heat shield area. It survived a surpisingly long time all things considered
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
Anyone with eyes could clearly see the spacecraft was tumbling uncontrollably the entire time.
@mrsbelcherАй бұрын
@@stargazer7644 This was not his point. Due to the tumbling the unprotected side of the ship got all the plasma for quite a long time without breaking up. Truly fascinating, but they still have to fix the tumbling of course. Looked super wrong from the very beginning.
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
@@mrsbelcherThe plasma had barely started in the part we could see. 70-80km up the air is still basically a vacuum, and it isn't going to damage anything. When the plasma got serious, that's when we lost the spacecraft.
@MustafaKemal-oe8ie7 күн бұрын
So incredible to see a Starship in space
@mickeyrotlep6807Ай бұрын
Amazing ! What an 8 minutes that was.
@YbWilsАй бұрын
Was an awe inspiring moment in history 🚀
@quannguyenle2330Ай бұрын
I believe there are something wrong happen with Starship thruster cause it is tumbling too much. We can clearly see that Staship re-entry on it's side while tumbling. Also, it seems that some piece of heat tiles is missing but still, far less than space shuttle. Look like it break up during re-entry and the signal blackout is due to the atenna was facing the wrong direction. Overall, it is still a great flight and I really look foward to IFT-4.
@DreamskyDanceАй бұрын
Yea it seems like that. Maybe they couldn't stop the spin after propellant transfer test, because as far as i saw they spun it up for that test. Maybe their RCS thrusters aren't powerful enough for the ship this size, at least that's what it seems to me ( a total layman ) on a glance. I mean it it seemed like it tried to correct its position but too slowly, and when it started heating up shield held up fine but the ship simply turned over to unshielded side towards the wind... If it entered a bit on its side ( towards the atmosphere and the ground ) and at one point accidentally tipped on the other ( unshielded ) side there is no way it can be flipped back around because the flaps will keep it in that orientation.
@quannguyenle2330Ай бұрын
@@DreamskyDance The flaps has tried it best but it no use since Starship was too much on it side. They will do it better next time
@mateogomez8413Ай бұрын
The reason why it didn't survive is because they couldn't start the engine to reduce the speed, so StarShip ended up going down faster than it had anticipated, so it couldn't stand, let's hope that in the next launch it can start. the engine and we can see how it ends up in the sea
@Wrangler-fp4eiАй бұрын
You're right, the directional thrusters were icing up from the everyday astronauts observations. It looked like it was right. It was tumbling quite a bit through the flight. That's probably why it was a little bit Tumblyier than normal. Either they have to come up with a de-icing method for those thrusters or they run out to switch to hot thrusters if they are going to expect them to stay clear and be usable. Booster may be the only one that can actually use those things without having to worry about icing up like it did.
@jamesh1597531Ай бұрын
@@mateogomez8413 that's not what happen
@user-ru5yy7bw9kАй бұрын
Absolutely fantastic bit of footage thankyou all for sharing this first reentry makes you proud to be a human again 🎉
@johnshields6852Ай бұрын
The clarity is fascinating, the fact that it lasted that long into the entry is incredible, I was 10 when the Apollo mission landed on the moon, those grainy images were amazing but these images of the earth are now etched in my mind forever. Thank you. 🇺🇸
@KILLKING110Ай бұрын
The footage of the plasma will definitely help to improve future heat shields
@kslv_KoreaSpaceLaunchVehicleАй бұрын
This is my favorite moment That was awesome
@darrinneat2920Ай бұрын
It lets you know how very small our little world is🌍♥️ and it gives you a view that no man can create we can only picture it❤ thank you very beautiful pictures❤
@coryleblancАй бұрын
its fake
@returnofthegmac9203Ай бұрын
I got goose bumps watching this. What an amazing feat of space engineers ❤
@deborahdoyle9723Ай бұрын
Congratulations Starship. 👍👍🚀🚀🇨🇦👍🚀🚀
@leokimvideoАй бұрын
Most amazing video of re entry, normally this is never seen. Thank God for starlink system. I'm confused did it land?
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
Yes it landed in the water...in about a million flaming pieces.
@DocMicrowaveАй бұрын
I thought it burned up (for the st part). They could not get Starship out of that roll and into the proper attitude. The heat shield was barely utilized.
@somethingsomeonesaid6455Ай бұрын
@@jeremywallis1960 Man, does your shadow exist?
@JoseyWales44sАй бұрын
@@jeremywallis1960 Uhhhhh....that video is real. It did not show a landing. What is your point? You're not one of those mentally deficient moon hoaxers, are you?
@ythinderАй бұрын
How are people supposed to "see it" in space any other way than watching a video of it?? These flat earthers and space deniers are really grasping at straws now lol
@robertpemberton3952Ай бұрын
WHY IS THIS NOT ON MAINSTREAM MEDIA!! WHAT COULD BE MORE IMPORTANT THAN THIS!
@juggerswoodАй бұрын
Possibility of america becoming a dictatorship
@dicksledge2447Ай бұрын
Just about everything else
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
What could be more important than a failed rocket launch that had no payload or people on board? I dunno, The Kardashians?
@zxccxz164Ай бұрын
apparently taylor swift ..... fakenews was never just about fake, but also omission .
@keving.4020Ай бұрын
Uncle Joe and Hunter having a sniffing competition.
@franciscooctavius5957Ай бұрын
Simply beautiful and amazing. The minds that go into this are incredible. Thank u.
@scottydont2549Ай бұрын
This is magical! What a moment to see so clearly and for so long.
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
It's an out of control tumbling spacecraft burning up and about to break apart.
@marvin7533Ай бұрын
This is incredible! We've never seen space video footage like this before back in the 80s and 90s.
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
Actually, we have.
@Cars_Things.Ай бұрын
The speed it's moving at is incredible
@lekutiw.temitope9727Ай бұрын
And the most incredible part is that the camera could still stand the heat ❤❤❤
@LerockJohnАй бұрын
Remember kids: No CGI. Absolutely beautiful!
@byt4fse2Ай бұрын
If you want CGI you should check out flat earth content.
@robertjustin9638Ай бұрын
Wrong, it's all CGI
@marinuscauldronАй бұрын
Nope..it's fake. What a waste of resources. 2/3 of the world is starving
@robertjustin9638Ай бұрын
Just because it's on the TV doesn't mean it's real. It's called programming for a reason
@fjfrancoisАй бұрын
No George Lucas 😩?
@soumapriyamondal3808Ай бұрын
Plasma was beautiful ❤️
@markofthedevil845Ай бұрын
This carries more weight than any ballgame ever could. Awesome
@jeffreycianciolo479Ай бұрын
Most incredible thing I ever witnessed
@scupkingАй бұрын
Awesome 3rd flight!! Each flight they have gotten so much farther. This one they almost completed everything they planned!
@fabr5747Ай бұрын
You know that there was a time where they would do it successfully ? They are delayed like crazy on the schedule and contracts for the HLS. They will need 20 rockets to go to the moon...
@liquidpatriot4480Ай бұрын
Agreed, amazing progress and looking forward to the next launch!
@fabr5747Ай бұрын
@@liquidpatriot4480 You mean delay?
@liquidpatriot4480Ай бұрын
@@fabr5747 what's wrong My salty butterfly 🦋?
@rizizumАй бұрын
@@fabr5747There wasn't? They failed on pretty much all the new stuff they tried to build, until it didn't fail anymore. And Starship is trying a whole lot of new stuff
@user-hh7qn6ux7oАй бұрын
So happy to see SpaceX doing so good. Love it
@jemaltedoradze098Ай бұрын
Team of Starship!,FANTASTIC JOP !!! CONGLATULATIONS! GOO LIKE!...
@Alex-um4feАй бұрын
Way to go guys, much better than NASA ever could ..
@nenaddimi8319Ай бұрын
This is so magnificent my skin just got goosebumps seeing our world from the outside of it and entering back to earth. Just mind blowing that we are piece of huge system where we float but here we feel safe touching the ground :D
@JamesWilson-ts5xkАй бұрын
Woah another first from SpaceX phenomenal work all. Unbelievable. 👏🚀💪
@sephjfoxАй бұрын
wow is right, this is one of the most impressive videos i have ever seen in my life 🥰🥰🥰🥰
@dasdguy760624 күн бұрын
Wow. video feed is amazing.
@mikebowers7719Ай бұрын
You guys rock at Spacex ,keep plugging along folks👍👍🚀🚀🚀🚀
@alejolzАй бұрын
Leaving my comment here in this historical day! Such a nice view from the camera, I'll show this to my grandchildren
@felixcasper586Ай бұрын
Yawn…
@Just1heyUАй бұрын
Incredible pictures. Good tech to follow up on and if possible improve. Go SpaceX 🌎
@donnelmoss757Ай бұрын
Wording is everything, never left Earth's atmosphere🤦🏾♂️
@Leo_HenryАй бұрын
Today, the hearts of space exploration enthusiasts beat faster as the SpaceX team made history with the successful completion of the Starship's 3rd Integrated Flight. It's incredible to be a part of this journey and witness this project go from concept to reality. Congratulations to the team! Happy Birthday SpaceX! And Happy Pi day! Thank you for the excitement, and see you on the next flight! ♥️🚀💯
@48BallenАй бұрын
History???? This was all done and more 50 years ago.....Amazing how people forget the moon landings.
@jeremywallis1960Ай бұрын
They really got you huh? CGI is powerful..
@Valhan177Ай бұрын
@@jeremywallis1960 And you believe in CGI. The government really got to you, didn't it? Ah well, not everyone has what it takes to keep the real truth...
@KoneleneАй бұрын
I don’t have any doubt for the next 100% success😍👍🏾
@mirandagaga9221Ай бұрын
Thank for posting awesome vies of starship!❤
@jeffrhorer1811Ай бұрын
That was incredible. Wow.
@user-co8uy5rb2sАй бұрын
Go SPACEX!!!!!!!❤
@bartsolari5035Ай бұрын
The joy and energy expressed by the folks at Space X...!
@JackieCT100Ай бұрын
FOUR TIMES the SPEED of SOUND!! AMAZING!!
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
You might want to check your math. Starship is going about 22 times the speed of sound.
@VictorFoster-dr4nf21 күн бұрын
The CGI is pretty darn good!
@Ethan_Roberts20 күн бұрын
This isn't CGI
@VictorFoster-dr4nf20 күн бұрын
Oh, I’m sure when they’re flying around up there in the sky like any old jet that’s not CGI but the part where they supposedly come in into the atmosphere that’s all fake
@Ethan_Roberts20 күн бұрын
@@VictorFoster-dr4nfwhy would that particular part be fake? If you agree they can put it into orbit, why would it be so hard to record it re-entering?
@unrealmango19 күн бұрын
@@Ethan_Roberts It is lil man 😉😉
@Ethan_Roberts19 күн бұрын
@@unrealmango you're not proving your beliefs by making poor insults and blind claims. Try again
@rnews5750Ай бұрын
It looks like the ship was losing some of it's heat shield. Great flight test! Looking forward to the fight data info.
@grahamavis6105Ай бұрын
Bits were coming off for a good few minutes before it hit the earths atmosphere and continued a plenty after doing so. Not just space debris!!
@stargazer7644Ай бұрын
The ship was tumbling pretty much the entire time. No effective attitude control.