Categories: SpaceX

Musk Shows how They’re Planning to Catch SuperHeavy Boosters

SpaceX’s entire business model is based on the reusability of its rockets.  That business model has proven viable time and time again as boosters continue to land safely only to be reused later.  But as the rockets they’re using get bigger and bigger, the harder and harder it will get for them to land directly on the ground, as models they’ve completed so far have.  So for its SuperHeavy Booster, designed to launch its Starship craft into orbit, SpaceX has to develop a new way of capturing the rockets without damaging them. Its head, Elon Musk, has shared a Twitter video showing how it will do just that.

The video, which s only 24 seconds long, shows a computer simulation of a SuperHeavy Booster descending back to Earth after launching its payload into orbit. It’s been viewed 4.3 million times as of the time of writing and has prompted a firestorm of interest online.

The tweet from Musk showing the descent and capture system.
Credit – Elon Musk / SpaceX

Like much of what SpaceX has designed so far, the system is unlike any ever seen in reality.  The booster itself has four rectangular fins at its top, splayed out like a giant cross outside the circular rocket housing.  As it performs its powered descent, it aims between two pincer-like appendages extruding from Starbase, the original launch platform itself.

That’s a pretty tight squeeze and much more challenging to navigate than existing powered descents, which have a landing pad to land on.  It’s also very similar to an animation system released by C-bass productions back in November.

Convincing 3D animation of how a real SuperHeavy Booster catch might look.
Credit – C-bass Productions YouTube Channel

While Starship itself was recently stacked on top of a heavy booster for the first time, and the company recently released a Starship update, hinting that the craft may fly by next month, there’s still a long way to go before this system is fully tested.  And there are plenty of people that are questioning the physics and economics of the system already. But if there is one rocketry company that has proven again and again that it can overcome seemingly immense technical challenges to literally get their rocket off (and back on) the ground, it’s SpaceX.

Learn More:
UT – Musk Confirms how “Mechazilla” Will Catch and Assemble Starship and Super Heavy for Rapid Reuse
Teslarati – SpaceX rocket catch simulation raises more questions about concept

Lead Image:
Captured image of the Super Heavy Descent simulation.
Credit – SpaceX

Andy Tomaswick

Recent Posts

Here’s How to Weigh Gigantic Filaments of Dark Matter

How do you weigh one of the largest objects in the entire universe? Very carefully,…

1 hour ago

How Could Astronauts Call for Help from the Moon?

Exploring the Moon poses significant risks, with its extreme environment and hazardous terrain presenting numerous…

14 hours ago

There Was a 15 Minute Warning Before Tonga Volcano Exploded

Volcanoes are not restricted to the land, there are many undersea versions. One such undersea…

14 hours ago

Main Sequence and White Dwarf Binaries are Hiding in Plain Sight

Some binary stars are unusual. They contain a main sequence star like our Sun, while…

15 hours ago

What a Misplaced Meteorite Told Us About Mars

11 million years ago, Mars was a frigid, dry, dead world, just like it is…

18 hours ago

Uranus is Getting Colder and Now We Know Why

Uranus is an oddball among the Solar System's planets. While most planets' axis of rotation…

21 hours ago