SpaceX Launches Falcon 1 27
ron_ivi writes "SpaceX has successfully launched it's first Falcon 1 rocket from the Kwajalein atoll in the middle of the Pacific Ocean today carrying a satellite for U.S. Air Force Academy that was originally scheduled to fly on the Space Shuttle Atlantis."
Link broken... (Score:1)
Not launched yet! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not launched yet! (Score:1)
Scrubbed until December (Score:2)
Watched a segment about it on TV (Score:3, Interesting)
I wish the company luck.
More information... (Score:2, Informative)
There's an image [wikimedia.org] of the Falcon 1 launch site. Let's hope this prospect is as promising as SpaceX's last endeavour.
Wow. (Score:5, Insightful)
Someone wanted first-post so badly that they submitted the story before the story happened.
Then the Slashdot "editors" happily posted it, without checking anything at all.
News for nerds? Stuff that may or may not be remotely real?
I guess I'll go back to relying on random made-up rumors for my news, 'cause I ain't gettin' it here.
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
Wait a second... (Score:1)
Right now it is 1:35PM California
Re:Wait a second... (Score:2)
RedBolivia?! (Score:1)
Compensation? (Score:2)
Re:Compensation? (Score:2)
Re:Compensation? (Score:1)
6PM update. (Score:1)
Real information, as of 0018 GMT (Score:3, Informative)
Here are some good sources of up-to-the-minute coverage:
* Spaceflight Now's Falcon 1 Mission Status Center [spaceflightnow.com]
* Liveblogging by Out of the Cradle [outofthecradle.net]
* Liveblogging by space reporter Michael Belfiore [michaelbelfiore.com]
* SpaceX's official launch info [spacex.com] (good info, but not updated as often as other sources)
They just got an extension on their launch window, and are still hoping to launch today (5pm PST at last report).
I've been eagerly awaiting this launch for the past couple of years. If it succeeds, it's going to change everything. Although their first rocket is relatively small, they're already working on much larger successors, all at a selling price which is a small fraction of their competitors'. Drastically cutting launch costs, increasing the launch rate, and enhancing space accessibility is crucial to SpaceX founder Elon Musk's [wikipedia.org] long-term goal: helping humanity become a spacefaring civilization.
If it doesn't succeed, well, Musk has stated that he can afford up to three consecutive launch failures before calling it quits.
The following have some more background info on what Elon Musk is trying to achieve with SpaceX:
* Hopes of Start-Up Rocket Company Are Riding on First Launch [latimes.com] (LA Times)
* SpaceX wikipedia article [wikipedia.org]
* Big Plans for SpaceX [thespacereview.com] (The Space Review, discusses plans for human spaceflight and building world's largest rocket engine)
* Shooting the Moon [spacex.com] (Discover Magazine)
*
On-site liveblogging by Elon Musk's brother (Score:3, Informative)
http://kwajrockets.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com]
At the moment, the LOX tanks have been filled, and they're on hold at T-minus 10 minutes while they refill Helium tanks and so forth. His blog has a number of photographs taken on the Pacific island they're launching from.
SCRUB! (Score:1)
Looks like they'll try again tomorrow at 1:00pm EST. I wish them the best of luck.
Aborted (Score:2)
They just scrubbed again (Score:2)
There is a bit of irony/humor in "News for Nerds" reporting it as having "successfully launched" ... while ideally it should not have been posted, I wonder if any subscribers sent a note to the /. Editors when this story was in the Mysterious Future.
Dupe! (Score:3, Funny)