SpaceX launched Starship on its Integrated Flight Test 3 from their Starbase facility in South Texas on March 14, 2024. Full Story: www.space.com/spacex-starship... Credit: SpaceX
I was thinking the same thing.Of course they'll just say "it's CGI from NASA to trick us into believing Earth is round."Like it's some big conspiracy and actually matters as much as they want it too.
@@Coach_cesar- Except human eyes aren't fish eye lenses. It's closing in on 800 people from at least 12 nations who have seen it first hand. That doesn't even count the thousands who flew the Concorde, or other extreme high altitude aircraft. It's even slightly noticeable from regular passenger flights. Give it up, already.
Ever since these great innovators started testing starship integrated flights; it started to deeply reflect on my own life and all the things that I am scared of attempting because I am afraid I'll but look at what they accomplished today! So Inspirational...
@@Alucard-gt1zf I watched the Apollo moon landing in third grade though... an actual rocket that actually went to the moon as opposed to Elon Musk vaporware.
I watch the shepherd launch when I was like 4 years old with my grandma and now to see this I get chills and tears every time I see this it blows me away❤❤❤
Hmmmmmm really in 5 to 10 years it's possible to get back to where we were in the 1960s shit I hope your taking the piss and that I don't have to ask you to go back and read exactly what you yourself wrote down and get you to have a real long hard think about it
@@CaptainCensorship Sure kiddo, specially when people watched it live and many people and observatories with telescopes tracked Apollo rockets thru most of it's journey.
@@CaptainCensorship Trolls like you kiddo are amusing and funny. It's reassuring to know you are just a kid trying to troll, because your real life sucks.
@CaptainCensorship I wer born 71 , my god parents watched live in three US. brought back a celebratory reel to reel of launch tower footage on take off , footage from the official visual tracker, footage and audio from the moon , and the splash down and recovery of the guys.
Thanks to Space X for renewing the public interest in space exploration. This is amazing to watch something like the Starship blast off, reach orbit and re-enter Earth atmosphere without a hitch.
SpaceX flies and fails, fixes what fails, flies again, gets further along and fails, etc Lather, rinse, repeat until you get to the Moon and Mars. Refreshing and very effective.
@@richardcoughlin8931 I don't know how many are planned, and the budget is likely whatever it takes, to a point. They're printing money with Falcon 9's re-use, and by the super-cheap launch costs for StarLink. Plus, the issue with the launches isn't the cost - they have an inventory of boosters and ships, and engines won't be cost prohibitive or a schedule challenge, to a point. The real cost is they only have so many test launches available, because of time, so they "spend" one with every launch.
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. Thank you for the excitement, and see you on the next flight! ♥️🚀💯
I saw Mars twice in my lifetime or maybe it was Jupitar with the naked eye, $900 dollar question, how far is it really anyways between earth and mars orbit and is it true USA military had sent 300 personnel already way back in the days?
This happened while I was in class . It was much better than test flights 1 and 2! I thought the ship did not survive the test flight until I saw that the ship was still going. I even watched the ship reenter the atmosphere and I was super excited!
This does nothing for humanity. I just held the door open for a lady and she looked at me with a frown on her face instead of smiling with a thank you. The launch doesn't change mean people and aholes. Good launch tho
It was surreal to watch the live launch on my tablet in the grocery store. I was stricken with bouts of nervousness, excitement and relief while viewing others go about their tedious shopping routines, seemingly unaware of the incredible events unfolding. Uncharacteristically, I disconnected my airpods and turned up the volume for all to hear.
It’s enough to make a guy very emotional What a significant milestone today The whole world is seeing OUR SYSTEM WORKS Thank you to every Single person who Helped in any way IT TAKES TEAMWORK TO MAKE STARSHIP FLY. Teamwork is not a particular strength of my So seeing my dreams come true I simply I MUST THANK EACH AND EVERY ONE OF YOU AND OCP TOO TWM
Hey marsspacex, when you do you think we could start seeing humans back to the moon again? We haven’t been there since 1972. Like what year specifically?🤔hopefully sooner, and what about mars?
I’m excited for the future of space x, each failure that space x has is a little more informations to go off of the next flight. Space x is going to be crucial for future space explorations.
Looks like the booster may have ran out of fuel prior to splash down and Starship appeared to be tumbling in space with no reaction thrusters, it seemed to be pointing in the wrong direction during re entry.
And they failed oh well the engines did not go out and they opened a door... but that was after they lost control over everything and starship was just a tumbeling bullet with a camera.🤣
@@triage2962wow, for someone smart enough to tell wether someone else’s stuff is a success or failure, your grammar is amazing! I can just about successfully read that mess!
@@triage2962 oh it's true!! No point in denying it or claiming any shred of advancement. This was clearly the worst failure in space history because they were missing a vital component to the whole attempt. They simply didn't have your expert knowledge and fine advice on how to do it properly. That entire giant team of seasoned engineers and actual rocket science experts were always doomed to fail because they didn't have you onboard from the start. If elon musk ever cared about the future of human space flight he would hand over spacex to you right now.
Should be lots of good data coming out of this. Looks like the control loops on reentry for both booster and ship need a bit of tuning. Next time! As a child of the Apollo era, I love seeing this come to fruition.
Wow, wow! Amazing. I’m so happy and fortunate to have had a tour of the Space X site in 2023. I feel like I’m actually there. Phenomenal!!! I look forward to future launches!
A step forward but with vehicle breakup there continues to be test flight failures. Long way to go before they put people onboard. Great onboard pics and hats off to SpaceX for being transparent about both success and failures. This seems to be the new agile approach to testing where engineers learn from in-flight failures. Where did the debris fall?
When you look at this and the good that free civilization is capable of, then you look at what many other parts of the world are up to, it makes you wonder when/how/why it went wrong for many countries.
The heaviest vehicle ever to fly and it was beautiful Will never tire of seeing this The day the chopsticks catch that thing will be a day long remembered
Just awesome!!! I think it splashed apart right next to MH-370... I got goosebumps at 7:37! Watching it go through that cloud layer hit me good for some reason. Maybe the sense of speed...
@@aaronbenton4921 Be ready for attacks but ya bro. lol its obviouse. also the curve at 125km high vs 80 km high is half as noticeable, which doesnt make sense. IYKYK
Im not a super space nerd (no offense) But something about Starship has me in awe. Watching the tests, fails, milestones is all amazing. from the first starship launch, to the first landing now to this. THIS IS incredible!!!