Musk aiming to send uncrewed Starship to Mars by end of 2026
Elon Musk, Chief Executive Officer of SpaceX and Tesla and owner of X looks on during the Milken Conference 2024 Global Conference Sessions at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., May 6, 2024. REUTERS/David Swanson/File Photo
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Two days after the latest in a string of test-flight
setbacks for his big new Mars spacecraft, Starship, Elon Musk said on
Thursday he foresees the futuristic vehicle making its first uncrewed voyage to
the red planet at the end of next year.
Musk presented a detailed Starship development timeline in a
video posted online by his Los Angeles area-based rocket company, SpaceX, a day
after saying he was departing the administration of U.S. President
Donald Trump as head of a tumultuous campaign to slash government bureaucracy.
The billionaire entrepreneur had said earlier that he was
planning to scale back his role in government to focus greater attention on his
various businesses, including SpaceX and electric car and battery maker Tesla
Inc.
Musk acknowledged that his latest timeline for reaching Mars
hinged on whether Starship can accomplish a number of challenging technical
feats during its flight-test development, particularly a post-launch refueling
maneuver in Earth orbit.
The end of 2026 would coincide with a slim window that
occurs once every two years when Mars and Earth align around the sun for the
closest trip between the two planets, which would take seven to nine months to
transit by spacecraft.
Musk gave his company a 50-50 chance of meeting that
deadline. If Starship were not ready by that time, SpaceX would wait another
two years before trying again, Musk suggested in the video.
The first flight to Mars would carry a simulated crew
consisting of one or more robots of the Tesla-built humanoid Optimus design,
with the first human crews following in the second or third landings. Musk said
he envisioned eventually launching 1,000 to 2,000 ships to Mars every two years
to quickly establish a self-sustaining permanent human settlement.
NASA is currently aiming to return humans to the surface of
the moon aboard Starship as early as 2027 - more than 50 years after its last
manned lunar landings of the Apollo era - as a stepping stone toward ultimately
launching astronauts to Mars sometime in the 2030s.
Musk, who has advocated for a more Mars-focused human
spaceflight program, has previously said he was aiming to send an unmanned
SpaceX vehicle to the red planet as early as 2018 and was targeting 2024 to
launch a first crewed mission there.
The SpaceX founder was scheduled to deliver a livestream
presentation billed as "The Road to Making Life Multiplanetary" from
the company's Starbase, Texas, launch site on Tuesday night, following a ninth
test flight of Starship that evening.
But the webcast was canceled without notice after Starship
spun out of control and disintegrated in a fireball about 30 minutes after
launch and roughly halfway through its flight path without achieving some of
its most important test goals.
Two preceding test flights in January and March failed in
more spectacular fashion, with the spacecraft blowing to pieces on ascent
moments after liftoff, raining debris over parts of the Caribbean and forcing
scores of commercial jetliners to change course as a precaution.
Musk shrugged off the latest mishap on Tuesday with a brief
post on X, saying it produced a lot of "good data to review" and
promising a faster launch "cadence" for the next several test
flights.


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