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SpaceX Almost Nails Water Landing… and “Almost” Means Things Blow Up

Remember the awesome landing SpaceX made last month with its reusable Falcon 9 first-stage rocket? This month’s attempt was almost as successful… and almost in rocketry is bad news:

Unlike the December landing on land, SpaceX returned to trying to land its Falcon 9 rocket on a barge, floating yesterday in 12- to 15-foot waves. They still managed to sit the rocket down right on target, but one of the four legs failed to lock into the landing pad, and… boom!

SpaceX still wants to achieve water landings, since they don’t require loading the rocket with more fuel to bring it back to land. Plus, if something goes wrong, there’s a lot less for rocket debris to hit at sea.

On the bright side, before it crashed, the Falcon 9 rocket did successfully heave NASA’s Jason-3 satellite into orbit, so we can get more data on sea levels and climate change that will support earthly policy and technology to keep our ecosystem from crashing and burning.

4 Comments

  1. Francis Schaffer

    Tuition.

  2. Jon Holmdal

    http://www.sncspace.com/ Sierra Nevada was one of 3 companies picked by NASA along with Space X to deliver cargo’s into space—Sierra Nevada’s “Dream Chasers” can land on a runway after returning from space. Pretty amazing!

  3. leslie

    speaking of monitoring climate change:

    +2 degrees +4 degrees

    Climateconference coastalfloods

    COASTAL FLOODS

    An estimated 2 million to 13 million

    people each year will be

    exposed to flooding

    Roughly equal to the

    population of…

    New Orleans and

    southern Louisiana

    …Louisiana, Mississippi

    and Alabama

    Climateconference riverfloods

    RIVER FLOODS

    About 130 million to 250 million

    people each year will be

    exposed to flooding

    …the entire South and

    part of the Northeast

    …the entire East and

    Midwest of the U.S.

    huffpo

  4. leslie

    (cont. from huff po today)
    WATER STRESS

    An estimated 1.5 billion

    to 2 billion people each year will live

    in areas without enough usable water

    …almost five times

    the U.S.

    …six times the U.S.

    Source: Committee on Climate Change, Census Bureau (population estimates). Charts show median estimates.
    1. Coastal flood estimates assume that flood protections evolve with population and wealth.
    2. River flood estimates assume that protections do

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