Monday , March 17 2025

First mission to Mars will launch next year: Musk

17-03-2025

WASHINGTON: SpaceX founder Elon Musk has said his Starship rocket will head to Mars by the end of next year, as the company investigates several recent explosions in flight tests.

Human landings could begin as early as 2029 if initial missions go well, though “2031 was more likely”, he added in a post on his social media platform X.

Starship, the largest rocket ever created standing at 123m is crucial to Musk’s ambitions to colonize the planet Mars.

However it has suffered multiple failures in tests one of the rockets exploded minutes after it was launched from Texas as part of a test last week, the second failure this year after a similar “rapid unscheduled disassembly” in January.

SpaceX said it would review data “to better understand (the) root cause” of the most recent explosion and noted it happened after the loss of “several” engines.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said the company would be required to conduct an investigation before it could fly again.

NASA hopes to use a modified version of the spaceship as a human lunar lander for its Artemis missions to return to the Moon.

The tech billionaire has grand designs that the rocket system will one day take humans to the Moon, and then on to Mars, making humans “multi-planetary”.

Musk has long targeted a trip to Mars. In 2016, he said he was planning to send his Dragon spacecraft as early as 2018.

The billionaire said in 2020 that he remained confident that his company would land humans on Mars six years later.

In 2024, he said he would launch the first Starships to Mars in 2026, with plans to send crewed flights in four years.

Musk has said that the coming Mars mission would carry the Tesla humanoid robot “Optimus”, which was shown to the public last year.

Musk said the robot would one day be able to perform everyday tasks, and cost between $20,000 and $30,000.

On Friday, SpaceX launched its Falcon 9 rocket carrying a crew to the International Space Station (ISS) as part of a plan to bring two astronauts back home.

Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams were due to be on the ISS for only eight days, but because of technical issues with the experimental spacecraft they came on, which was built by Boeing, they have been there for more than nine months.

Earlier, a SpaceX rocket exploded shortly after it was launched from Texas on Thursday, grounding flights and triggering warnings about falling spaceship debris.

SpaceX confirmed the un-crewed ship had suffered “a rapid unscheduled disassembly” during its ascent into space, and lost contact with the ground.

The massive SpaceX Starship, the largest rocket ever created, spun out of control shortly after its launch. No injuries or damage have been reported but images from those in Caribbean Sea island nations show fiery debris raining from the sky.

This was the eighth mission to test the rocket, and its second consecutive failure.

The spaceship, which measures 123m (403ft) at takeoff, was meant to re-enter Earth’s orbit over the Indian Ocean after a one-hour flight.

Its Super Heavy booster, which helps it leave the ground, did manage successfully to return to the Launchpad.

SpaceX, which is owned by billionaire Elon Musk, said teams immediately started coordinating with safety officials for “pre-planned contingency responses”.

The statement added that SpaceX would review data “to better understand root cause” of the misfire and noted the explosion happened after the loss of “several” engines. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

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