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Space
Space
Science
Mike Wall

Gorgeous photos show SpaceX's next Starship Super Heavy booster on the launch pad

a silver spacex starship rocket is lowered onto its launch mount at night

Here are a couple of rocket glory shots for you.

SpaceX just rolled Booster 9, the latest iteration of its Starship Super Heavy vehicle, out to the launch pad at its Starbase facility in South Texas to gear up for a planned test flight.

On Friday (July 21), SpaceX posted two photos on Twitter that capture the very end of that process.

RelatedRelive SpaceX's explosive 1st Starship test in incredible launch photos

Booster 9 settles onto the launch mount at Starbase. (Image credit: SpaceX via Twitter)

One of the photos shows the giant vehicle being lowered onto the orbital launch mount. Most of its 33 Raptor engines are visible, hit by upward-facing orange light that makes it look as if they're firing.

Booster 9 is nestled atop the mount in the second shot, its Raptors hidden by the launch infrastructure. In both photos, the dark South Texas skies sparkle with hundreds of stars.

Starship is SpaceX's next-generation transportation system, which the company is developing to get cargo and people to the moon, Mars and beyond. The vehicle consists of two fully reusable elements: Super Heavy and a 165-foot-tall (50 meters) upper-stage spacecraft called Starship.

A fully stacked Starship has flown just once to date, on an April 20 test flight that aimed to send the upper stage much of the way around Earth. (The desired outcome was a splashdown near Hawaii.) But the vehicle suffered several anomalies shortly after liftoff, and SpaceX sent a self-destruct command, which took effect four minutes into flight, when Starship was over the Gulf of Mexico.

Booster 9 will be paired with the Ship 25 upper-stage prototype for the coming test flight, which will have similar aims as the first one. The test mission could launch as soon as this summer, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk has said, but that assumes no regulatory issues hold the liftoff up. 

And that's certainly not a given; a coalition of environmental groups is current suing the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, claiming the agency didn't properly assess the damage that Starship could inflict on the South Texas ecosystem.

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