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Communications Canada Space United States

SpaceX Successfully Launches and Lands Its Falcon 9 Rocket On the California Coast (theverge.com) 59

SpaceX successfully launched and deployed three RADARSAT Canadian satellites into orbit this morning. Despite heavy fog, the company also landed the Falcon 9 rocket on the California coast. The Verge reports: The trio of satellites going up on today's flight are part of the RADARSAT Constellation developed by the Canadian Space Agency. The spacecraft are meant to operate nearly 400 miles up, where they will observe Canada's land and waters, as well as the Arctic. The goal is to gather data on sea ice in nearby oceans and the Great Lakes, as well as the changing ecosystems within Canada. Such information will be useful for many groups, including mariners who navigate in Arctic waters and scientists who want to understand the impact of climate change in the region. Satellite imagery from RADARSAT could also help with disaster relief.

SpaceX is using one of its used Falcon 9 rockets for the mission, a vehicle that previously flew the company's Crew Dragon capsule on its very first flight to the International Space Station back in March. After that launch, the Falcon 9 landed on one of SpaceX's drone ships off the coast of Florida in the Atlantic, but now it's ready to make a ground landing on the opposite coast. The first and only time that SpaceX has landed a Falcon 9 rocket on California land was in October of 2018. Nearly all of the company's attempts to land on solid ground have been successful, save for one that missed its pad in Florida and landed in the ocean instead.

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SpaceX Successfully Launches and Lands Its Falcon 9 Rocket On the California Coast

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  • by sunderland56 ( 621843 ) on Wednesday June 12, 2019 @07:22PM (#58752792)

    We've already been to the California coast. What sort of "exploration" is that?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      "Haha, SUCKERS!!! Watch out for short-selling pedos, BITCHES!!" - Elon Musk flies by on a rocket holding a Goldshlager margarita, finding a curb of water to splash on your white blouse somehow incredulously, considering it's a rocket.

      Whoosh, gone. Just vapors.

    • Well, the kids have school tomorrow so we had to get back before bed time.
    • Maybe it was to finally get uncensored/unsuppressed pictures of this particular domicile [wikipedia.org].

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      We've already been to the California coast. What sort of "exploration" is that?

      Things change fast there. Wait not much longer and it will be like exploring Mexico.

  • I felt like... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dex22 ( 239643 ) <plasticuser@nOSpam.gmail.com> on Wednesday June 12, 2019 @07:28PM (#58752826) Homepage

    I felt like I was living in the sci fi future when the two first stages landed side by side together.

    If SpaceX really wants to seal the deal, they should relocate the rockets between the east and west coasts by just flying them there.

    That would seal the deal for me. :D

    • Re:I felt like... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by complete loony ( 663508 ) <Jeremy@Lakeman.gmail@com> on Wednesday June 12, 2019 @09:05PM (#58753240)

      they should relocate the rockets between the east and west coasts by just flying them there

      While that would be fun, rockets are still expensive and not that efficient. The fuel cost, the probability and cost of failure are still too high.

    • "If SpaceX really wants to seal the deal, they should relocate the rockets between the east and west coasts by just flying them there."

      as i 43 year old seasoned consultant, husband, and father of two let me say "omfg that would be cool!"
    • He's already [theverge.com] one step ahead of you.
    • If SpaceX really wants to seal the deal, they should relocate the rockets between the east and west coasts by just flying them there.

      Odds are Starship will relocate itself that way as much as possible. It's so huge that dragging it around using conventional transport is fantastically expensive and difficult. Admittedly it's not as huge as it was originally intended to be, but its diameter is still way past inconveniently large.

  • The satellites are to keep tabs on the USA and Russia as both those fuckers keep trying to park ships in our water to claim ownership.
  • More backgrounds can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

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