STARBASE, Texas—SpaceX launched the 10th test flight of the company's Starship rocket Tuesday evening, sending the stainless steel spacecraft halfway around the world to an on-target splashdown in the Indian Ocean.
The largely successful mission for the world's largest rocket was an important milestone for SpaceX's Starship program after months of repeated setbacks, including three disappointing test flights and a powerful explosion on the ground that destroyed the ship that engineers were originally readying for this launch.
For the first time, SpaceX engineers received data on the performance of the ship's upgraded heat shield and control flaps during reentry back into the atmosphere. The three failed Starship test flights to start the year ended before the ship reached reentry. Elon Musk, SpaceX's founder and CEO, has described developing a durable, reliable heat shield as the most pressing challenge for making Starship a fully and rapidly reusable rocket.
And there were lessons to learn from Tuesday's test flight. The ship made it all the way to the Indian Ocean intact, arriving next to a prepositioned buoy northwest of Australia, where it was just after sunrise Wednesday morning at the time of splashdown. A camera on the buoy showed the ship slowing down before contacting the water, then tipping over and exploding as expected.
But a large section of the ship had transitioned from its original silver color to a rusty hue of orange and brown. Officials didn't immediately address this or say whether it was anticipated, but it could suggest heating damage to the rocket's stainless steel skin during reentry. If so, that might require more changes to the design of the ship's heat shield, but this is the kind of information engineers were looking for with this test flight.
The auspicious results showed that SpaceX has solved the problems that hamstrung the Starship program earlier this year. Most of the issues that led to the ship's recent failures were in the rocket's propulsion and propellant systems. Those all appeared to function well on Tuesday.
It also lays the foundation for SpaceX to test new Starship capabilities, such as recovering the ship back at the launch site and in-orbit refueling. These are critical prerequisites for Starship to achieve its full promise: flying cargo and eventually people to more distant destinations like the Moon and Mars.
"Congratulations to SpaceX on its Starship test," wrote Sean Duffy, NASA's acting administrator, on X. "Flight 10's success paves the way for the Starship Human Landing System that will bring American astronauts back to the Moon on Artemis III. This is a great day for NASA and our commercial space partners."
NASA has two contracts with SpaceX worth more than $4 billion to develop a version of Starship to land astronauts on the lunar surface. Meanwhile, SpaceX's founder and CEO, Elon Musk, is focused on sending Starships to Mars.
Here’s what happened
Tuesday's mission began a little more than an hour earlier with the liftoff of SpaceX's 404-foot-tall (123.1-meter) Super Heavy booster and Starship upper stage from the company's launch site in Starbase, Texas, just north of the US-Mexico border, at 6:30 pm CDT (7:30 pm EDT; 23:30 UTC). SpaceX called off two launch attempts on Sunday and Monday due to a technical problem and bad weather.
But Tuesday's countdown was smooth, and the rocket lit 33 Raptor engines on its Super Heavy booster stage at the opening of the launch window. Moments later, the rocket lumbered skyward, riding nearly 17 million pounds of thrust and trailing a distinctive blue-orange flame from its methane-fueled engines.
Heading east over the Gulf of Mexico, Starship and its Super Heavy booster accelerated through the speed of sound and rocketed into the stratosphere in the first couple of minutes of the flight. Then, right on time, the booster shut off its engines and released from the Starship upper stage about two-and-a-half minutes into the launch.
Starship ignited six of its own Raptor engines to continue powering itself into space, while the Super Heavy booster flipped around to fly tail-first and relit some of its engines in the uppermost reaches of the atmosphere to reverse course and boost itself back toward the Texas coastline.

Starship and its Super Heavy booster ascend through a clear sky over Starbase, Texas, on Tuesday evening. A visible vapor cone enveloped the rocket as it passed through maximum aerodynamic pressure and the speed of sound.
Credit:
Stephen Clark/Ars Technica
On this mission, SpaceX intentionally guided the Super Heavy booster toward a location in the Gulf of Mexico just offshore from Starbase, forgoing another attempt to catch the rocket back at the launch pad. SpaceX has recovered three Super Heavy boosters in this manner before.
Instead, on Tuesday's flight, engineers wanted to test the rocket's ability to overcome an engine failure during its landing burn. One of the booster's three center engines was intentionally disabled during descent, and the rocket used a combination of two center engines and one engine from the middle ring of Raptor powerplants to slow down for splashdown.
The booster appeared to handle the stress test well, settling into the Gulf and tipping over as planned. The descent was visible to spectators onshore and was accompanied by a double sonic boom.
Meanwhile, the ship's upper stage fired its engines until the nine-minute mark in the flight, reaching a top speed during launch of 16,463 mph (26,495 kilometers per hour), just shy of the velocity needed for a stable orbit around the Earth. This put the rocket on a trajectory to soar to a peak altitude of 119 miles (192 kilometers), passing over the Atlantic Ocean, South Africa, and then the Indian Ocean before falling back into the atmosphere.
The flight's next milestone was a first for Starship. About 15 minutes into the mission, the ship opened its payload bay door and began releasing eight flat-packed steel panels installed on the rocket to simulate the deployment of SpaceX's next-generation Starship Internet satellites.
This was the first time SpaceX used the ship's payload deployment mechanism, which engineers liken to a Pez dispenser, using pulleys to move the rack of Starlink simulators and push them out of the rocket's side door one at a time. Future Starship flights will launch as many as 60 next-generation Starlinks per launch, greatly increasing the network's capacity, according to Dan Huot, a SpaceX official who anchored the company's live webcast of Tuesday's flight.
The ship then closed its payload bay door and prepared to restart one of its six engines for a brief maneuver to test its ability to change its trajectory. The three-second burn was successful, demonstrating that the ship could guide itself toward reentry on future flights into low-Earth orbit.

This screenshot from SpaceX's official livestream shows heat damage to one of Starship's rear flaps.
Credit:
SpaceX
Finally, flying belly-forward with its nose pointed skyward, Starship plunged back into the atmosphere. A spectacular sheath of purple-orange plasma surrounded the ship as temperatures climbed to near 2,600° Fahrenheit (1,430° Celsius). Live video from multiple cameras outside the ship showed it moving its flaps to steer through reentry, using aerodynamic forces from the thickening air to aim for the splashdown zone, where a buoy was waiting to see it drop into the sea.
The reentry profile was designed to intentionally stress the structural limits of the ship's rear flaps. Engineers planned to use the test as a learning exercise before SpaceX eventually returns a future ship from orbit back to the launch pad, where giant mechanical arms will catch it in a similar way to how SpaceX has shown it can catch Super Heavy boosters.
The ship made it all the way through reentry, turned to a horizontal position to descend through scattered clouds, then relit three of its engines to flip back to a vertical orientation for the final braking maneuver before splashdown.
Things to improve on
There are several takeaways from Tuesday's flight that will require some improvements to Starship, but these are more akin to what officials might expect from a rocket test program and not the catastrophic failures of the ship that occurred earlier this year.
One of the Super Heavy booster's 33 engines prematurely shut down during ascent. This has happened before, and while it didn't affect the booster's overall performance, engineers will investigate the failure to try to improve the reliability of SpaceX's Raptor engines, each of which can generate more than a half-million pounds of thrust.
Later in the flight, cameras pointed at one of the ship's rear flaps showed structural damage to the back of the wing. It wasn't clear what caused the damage, but super-heated plasma burned through part of the flap as the ship fell deeper into the atmosphere. Still, the flap remained largely intact and was able to help control the vehicle through reentry and splashdown.
"We’re kind of being mean to this Starship a little bit," Huot said on SpaceX's live webcast. "We're really trying to put it through the paces and kind of poke on what some of its weak points are."
Small chunks of debris were also visible peeling off the ship during reentry. The origin of the glowing debris wasn't immediately clear, but it may have been parts of the ship's heat shield tiles. On this flight, SpaceX tested several different tile designs, including ceramic and metallic materials, and one tile design that uses "active cooling" to help dissipate heat during reentry.
A bright flash inside the ship's engine bay during reentry also appeared to damage the vehicle's aft skirt, the stainless steel structure that encircles the rocket's six main engines.
"That's not what we want to see," Huot said. "We just saw some of the aft skirt just take a hit. So we've got some visible damage on the aft skirt. We’re continuing to reenter, though. We are intentionally stressing the ship as we go through this, so it is not guaranteed to be a smooth ride down to the Indian Ocean.
"We’ve removed a bunch of tiles in kind of critical places across the vehicle, so seeing stuff like that is still valuable to us," he said. "We are trying to kind of push this vehicle to the limits to learn what its limits are as we design our next version of Starship."
Shana Diez, a Starship engineer at SpaceX, perhaps summed up Tuesday's results best on X: "It's not been an easy year but we finally got the reentry data that's so critical to Starship. It feels good to be back!"
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