Watch: SpaceX Super Heavy-Starship successfully launches
SpaceX launched its Super Heavy-Starship on its fourth test flight Thursday morning. See the world's most powerful rocket lift off.
CBS News 24/7 is the premier anchored streaming news service from CBS News and Stations that is available free to everyone with access to the internet and is the destination for breaking news, live events, original reporting and storytelling, and programs from CBS News and Stations' top anchors and correspondents working locally, nationally and around the globe. It is available on more than 30 platforms across mobile, desktop and connected TVs for free, as well as CBSNews.com and Paramount+ and live in 91 countries.
Subscribe to the CBS News KZread channel: / cbsnews
Watch CBS News 24/7: cbsnews.com/live/
Download the CBS News app: cbsnews.com/mobile/
Follow CBS News on Instagram: / cbsnews
Like CBS News on Facebook: / cbsnews
Follow CBS News on X: / cbsnews
Subscribe to our newsletters: cbsnews.com/newsletters/
Try Paramount+ free: paramountplus.com/?ftag=PPM-0...
For video licensing inquiries, contact: licensing@veritone.com
Пікірлер: 1 100
And to think that that thing is taller than the Statue of Liberty is insane.
@renox9108
Ай бұрын
Second stage Starship Spacecraft is taller than Liberty statue. If you adding Super Heavy Booster,that will be make Liberty statue to dwarf 😂
@Damdebase
21 күн бұрын
Aren't many rockets taller than the statue of liberty? Ariane rocket is 53m tall, Starship is 50m tall.
@originalusername121
21 күн бұрын
@@Damdebase The Statue Of Liberty is 93 meters tall, starship combined with its booster is 121.3 meters tall at liftoff.
@Damdebase
21 күн бұрын
@@originalusername121 right ok I guess I was comparing the statue without it's base with starship without booster, my bad 😓
@Malc180s
18 күн бұрын
Slightly taller than a rocket from 60 years ago. Progress.
The screaming sound before engine ignition is wonderful, it's the sound of the deluge system at max pressure and the blow off valve opening.
@TheNonlinearLife
Ай бұрын
I thought it was the sound of the gates of hell opening up underneath this beast
@Muonium1
Ай бұрын
And the screaming sound at splashdown, moreso.
@ChrisSmith-il5qe
Ай бұрын
I heard that and was curious what it was. Thanks for the explaination.
@doyourownresearch7297
15 күн бұрын
no, its the sound of the left of politics whining because musk dared to take away their grasp of social media manipulation.
Congrats to CBS for calling this test flight a success. It's a first in main stream media.
@Sinistatnt
Ай бұрын
I was coming to comment the same thing. Actually shocked in a good way that the mainstream hasn’t ran with some B.S. like last time “SpaceX rocket explodes before completing mission”
@kerbalengineeringsystems7415
Ай бұрын
It's almost like all the previous flights were failures
@Sinistatnt
Ай бұрын
@@kerbalengineeringsystems7415 which they weren’t whatsoever.
@mrjpb23
Ай бұрын
It’s a shame they reported so inaccurately this time. Only SpaceX clans could consider having your spaceship melt and catch on fire during a suborbital reentry a “success.”
@kerbalengineeringsystems7415
Ай бұрын
@@Sinistatnt They failed to achieve their primary objectives so, yes, they were failures.
It is crazy spaceX can do this at lightning speed compared to traditional space travel. Then you have a company like blue origin that can't even get a rocket to orbit.
@wkjeeping9053
Ай бұрын
Boeing is at least 10 to 20 years behind spacex right now. Boeing should be 10 years ahead of everybody since they built the space shuttles and maintain them for over 10 years. We sent people to the moon in the 70s with barely any tech. But we cant get there with now days tech, which a microwave now days has more computing power than saturn 5 rocket. Smart phones has more processing power then the space shuttles in the 90s. Blue origin min 25 years behind. Blue origin only goes sub orbit.
@Ncyphen
Ай бұрын
It's called Fast R&D. Research, build a prototype, test it, obtain results, repeat. SpaceX is able to do this because they have money and are not hard reliant on government funding. Boeing and NASA, on the other hand, rely heavily on government funding. If they were to try the same approach with Fast R&D, one failure could cause congress to reconsider their funding, even if they yielded amazing research data from the test. (Most congressmen are not engineers. They do not understand the value of data from failure and simply observe the money as wasted.)
@zelrex4657
Ай бұрын
Yeah they use several techniques. Most specifically in my opinion is that they don't worry about getting funds and instead use stock buyers money to go directly into projects with investors usually not caring enough to make revenue from it. In a way it's kinda a massive donation fund.
@TheAndroidNextDoor
Ай бұрын
@zelrex4657 SpaceX is a privately held company, though. There are no investors or stocks to be bought for it. All its money comes from its contracts with its customers or from whatever Elon Musk decides to spend on it that day. Honestly, the reason they're probably able to turn around so fast is that they're NOT taking any investor's money or beholden to give a return to shareholders. They, rather ironically, can take more risks in blowing up their own launch vehicles in test flights and not have to give a care about their stock prices because the typical hedge fund manager is as skittish and short sighted as the typical squirrel, only able to look as far as the next quarterly report.
@tjdawson8942
Ай бұрын
@@TheAndroidNextDoor they def take investors money , just because they don't sell shares to the public .. ask Ron Barron how much he has invested in spacex
Looks like we're getting closer to going to MARS. WOW, SPACE X ROCKS!!!!!!❤❤
@BlastinRope
Ай бұрын
mars is a dead rock, asteroid mining is where its at, venus cloud cities maybe
@crazzylongears8835
Ай бұрын
Long way
Ай бұрын
That will be fun in a spacecraft that can't even reach orbit...
@pigslefats
Ай бұрын
Who the hell wants to go to a dead rock. Gotta be brain dead
@SpaceAdvocate
Ай бұрын
This is the second time they've had a nominal orbital insertion. They just need a small circularization burn to be in orbit, or alternatively they could just point the rocket engines slightly differently during launch. The only reason they haven't reached orbit is that they haven't wanted to for these test flights.
the whole building was going absolutely insane .. congrats SPACE X
Good job on CBS for staying objective, aka real journalism.
@krime2001
Ай бұрын
Yeah, it must be sooo tempting to talk smack when a certain someone is involved. But Space X are an amazing team and their work deserves all the praise.
@NeblogaiLT
Ай бұрын
@@krime2001 This is not about a certain idiot tweeting geopolitics. This is about a company reaching new goals and learning, and journalists reporting the success, instead of going 'engines blew up, and the ship melted, it is a failure'.
@jasonedwarddoucette
Ай бұрын
broken clock is right 2 times daily
Right now I have tears in my eyes seeing all those Spacex boys and girls celebrating their nights and hours of calculations and simulation with mathematics. Thank you thank you You make me feel proud with people of science.
Awesome! This should be the main focus for human development.
@unotechrih8040
Ай бұрын
This vehicle will certainly change human space flight as we know it. Amazing times to witness!
@adamoshea2793
Ай бұрын
Imagine all the money and human efforts went into making amazing technology not wars
@frankE91210
Ай бұрын
abondoning the smoldering embers of our planet we destroyed?
@gh3meister
Ай бұрын
@frankE91210 extinction events would happen whether we were here or not, look what happened to the dinosaurs
@tobis.4037
Ай бұрын
@@gh3meister I still don't get this whole "we have to be ready to get humanity off earth in case of an extinction event" - so what if all of humanity dies out? No one left to cry about it, the universe certainly doesn't care.
flat earthers in shambles right now
@mikes7446
15 күн бұрын
k
@itknxero6518
14 күн бұрын
No they will always find a way to ignore facts.
@b_itachigaming2563
10 күн бұрын
Where are the stars?why was it hard to point a camera to space?
@RegulareoldNorseBoy
8 күн бұрын
@@b_itachigaming2563 9:00 You seriously don't see stars ???
@Vidsofthe_Day
7 күн бұрын
@@mikes7446 there’s no curve ? 😂 only the the end of the world 😂
Both halves also landed. Stage one hovering for a sec over the water before dropping in. State two has a fin (brobably both) burn and start to fall apart at the edge before going through a controlled landing (the fin clearly actuating despite the burn through on the edge).
@Ncyphen
Ай бұрын
This version of Starship launched with a known faulty design for the fins. They've already redesigned the fin casing to better shield the gap between the fin and the hull for better protection. With this flight, SpaceX was curious on how well the ship would hold together after and while incurring direct damage from re-entry. SpaceX had also removed two tiles and replaced another tile with a thin tile. I think SpaceX was just as surprised when Starship still had enough control from all four fins to belly flop the vehicle into position for a soft landing.
Ай бұрын
Landed as in "what goes up must come down"...
@Asterra2
Ай бұрын
@@Ncyphen Funny thing is that if the FAA hands over the next license quickly enough, SpaceX will probably send up Ship 30 next, just to keep it from being wasted on scrapping. They can do new tests with it, like relighting Raptor in space or hovering for 20 seconds or whatever, but in the end, it's got the same flap design so those flaps would melt again. I can already see people not understanding this and making fun of SpaceX for failing to fix the problem in three weeks.
@davidedwards1705
Ай бұрын
the little fin that could.
@PiDsPagePrototypes
Ай бұрын
@@Asterra2 They could pitch it as a 'ratification of design and engineering by obtaining identical results'.
Seeing the shockwaves through the clouds as it climbs is so cool. Insane amount of power coming from those 32 engines
@richspillman4191
Ай бұрын
That's never happened in the 60 years I've been watching rockets fly. Like someone is trying too hard, it's fake.
@LordDonnington725
Ай бұрын
@@richspillman4191 I was gonna ask if people like you have better things to do, but your comment basically answered my question for me.
@richspillman4191
Ай бұрын
@@LordDonnington725 You mean like watching fake rocket launches?
@harmonybutnomoney
21 күн бұрын
@@richspillman4191Why do you think it's fake? It's the strongest rocket to date, so it's not like it has to act the same way the past 60 years of rockets have.
@richspillman4191
21 күн бұрын
@@harmonybutnomoney Like the supreme court said about obscenity "I know it when I see it..." and it's the same here, I know a fake when I see it, and this is as fake as a fake fake is fake. The fin flapping in the wind not affecting the stability of the craft, the plasma flow not matching the direction of travel, keep an open mind and let your discernment tell you if this is everything they are telling you it is. For me, I am not deceived.
Just amazing. We just flew for the first time around 100 years ago. Humans have been around for houndred of thousands of years so just imagine what we will do in 100 000 thousand years! Be proud!😊
@MyLifeInVideos
Ай бұрын
I definitely think if nothing happens to us and technology keeps progressing with no stopping we will definitely already be at other stars in 100,000 years
@Plantoffel
Ай бұрын
Other galaxy’s! With 100.000 years we’re at other galaxy’s!
@user-on6xv2or4l
Ай бұрын
120 years of powered flight
@Goodwin454
28 күн бұрын
it started from Ibn Firnas to this just insane .
@astecheee1519
22 күн бұрын
@@MyLifeInVideos With our current understanding of physics, it'd be VERY hard to reach other stars. Even at light speed Alpha Centauri is over 4 years away. And a vessel transporting humans is unlikely to go anywhere near that fast. Then factor in that another planet capable of supporting human life is damn near impossible. I'd LOVE a future like that, but it's just not possible.
This always looks better than any Hollywood movie. Every single time.
Flat earthers : It's fake.. it's AI.
Congratulations to the SpaceX team. This rocket is the stuff of legends.
Within the next year it's likely SpaceX will be able to land Starship on a pad in the ocean. Meanwhile, people still can't park in the lines in a parking lot.
@-insert-
Ай бұрын
There are no stated plans to land Starship on an ocean pad ala Falcon 9. Both Starship and its booster are designed to be caught. In fact Musk stated in a post flight 4 interview that given the accuracy of the boosters return they may attempt a catch for flight 5. He also stated that Starship missed the mark by 6 kilometers, although he gave no reason why.
@chainsawdodge834
Ай бұрын
@-insert- my point is that they'd be capable of landing it on a pad if they wanted to.
@snowy800123
Ай бұрын
Hey stop picking on my wife😅
@theeyeofomnipotent
Ай бұрын
@@-insert- cough cough, probably the litteral burning fins but maybe not, welp still need more tests before we actually get a viable vehicle
Idk about anyone else but I felt the blast through my phone that was absolutely massive 😍
The crowd sounds more like being at a concert than a test launch. Love their enthusiasm and excitement.
@Thulgore
17 күн бұрын
The term is "rubes".
@ashleigh3021
15 күн бұрын
@@ThulgoreAnd who are you exactly?
Yeah pure American ingenuity
@MrTea7
Ай бұрын
Apparently Elon is getting this done without legions of B-1s. The DOJ is suing him for hiring Americans! Meanwhile (you did not see this on the "news") Zuckerbucks had a 25-year-old Chinese B-1 boy suicide out the window at Facebook HQ. The lone engineer who stepped up to protest working conditions/issues got fired immediately. Web search with different engines and see who says what about this.
@jv-lk7bc
29 күн бұрын
by a South African
@deejay-su7uf
28 күн бұрын
Yeah.pure american pollution.
@localbean1441
27 күн бұрын
@@deejay-su7ufit’s uses methane, and liquid oxygen, it doesn’t use conventional fuel, and crude oils. Also, it is recovered after landing, creating low amount of trash.
@lizmramsey6852
18 күн бұрын
I love this
man that opening launch sequence where a drone camera is looking down at the Starship is magnifique
Thank You For Sharing This…
Meca Zilla catch is gonna be wild , cant wait!
0:48 the schock waves in the air and through the clouds 😮🎉
@egooidios5061
7 күн бұрын
the enormous mach cones? All with starsip is just big
Fijaros en las ondas de sonido que salen del cohete y se dirigen en los 360 grados en todas direcciones, miren las que van al mar se ven perfectamente. Incluso la potencia de los motores interfieren en el sonido durante los primeros segundos de vuelo. Saludos desde España.
you know you've got a big rocket when the microphones give up
The view of the bottom of all the engines never gets old for me.
The flight of star hopper was awesome, Ship one super awesome, this flight… well mind blown.
My OCD really hates that one engine out...just saying
@dunzek943
Ай бұрын
Engineers too don't worry lol
@Spaceflightlover2010
Ай бұрын
Apollo 13 lost one on ascent, second stage I believe and they only had 5 engines.
@King_Georges_Calcified_Elbow
15 күн бұрын
@@Spaceflightlover2010 yes we've all seen the movie
Godspeed! Why not!? 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Upon startup, it sounds like the ignition of a 1958 Plymouth Omni and a Flash Gordon rocket from that same time period.
the future of humanity in front of our eyes. AMAZING.
I want to go to Mars. Don’t care if I come back I just want to go there
"successfully launches" happened 3 tests ago, should have mentioned successfully lands against all odds :)
@HamptonGuitars
Ай бұрын
Including a meltdown!
What a lifetime to be alive. Incredible!
Man this is so inspiring and impressive
Melted like a birthday candle but kept flying. That's somethin.
@richspillman4191
Ай бұрын
It's fake and filmed in a studio or 100% cgi. There is no way they filmed that last scene from Texas with the ship 3200 miles away, why lie about any of it, then the whole thing is a lie. Did you notice the ship stopped moving when the two halves separated? Do not be deceived.
@ZennExile
Ай бұрын
@@richspillman4191 your brain is not functioning properly. You should have it checked.
@localbean1441
27 күн бұрын
@@richspillman4191 it kept good connection, via starlink. Traditionally viewing of reentry was impossible, as it couldn’t be transmitted though the plasma during reentry, so instead they used starlink and basically transmitted it up, were plasma was not at. Then it was transmitted back to Texas, thus skipping the plasma. Also throughout most the stream, you can see it moving, just at that height it seems slower, imagine being on a plane, it seems slower than it really is. If you payed a bit more attention at the stream, and maybe school you would’ve understood. Almost forgot to say, that is not what CGI looks like. CGI, looks a lot more plasticity, and more smoother, also the lightning is not realistic. Maybe learn about CGI before you say something is CGI?
@richspillman4191
27 күн бұрын
@@localbean1441 That flapping fin was the fakest part of the whole thing, Ole wobbly doing the death throes was just silly, especially how they made it so dramatic, "awe look, he's hurt" the body didn't spin, it didn't canter, oh it just tried and tried. Remember in the '60's and '70's if a bolt or rivet came loose at half that speed it was disaster...That fin appendage was flopping and it had NO effect on the structure, I CALL BS. There should have been the agony of defeet, stinky feet.
@localbean1441
27 күн бұрын
@@richspillman4191 it wasn’t flopping, it started pitching as it was going into the belly flip for the landing burn, also the hinge kept it together, no screws or nuts came off, sure it did burn though part of the materiel and also blew off some heat tiles, but that wasn’t a catastrophic failure. The reason why accidents with rockets happened before was failure of a major component, example, major loss of heat tiles, fuel lines coming undone, engine implosion. So this is entirely possible, as it’s logical that it could survive, and it did survive. Also please explain in your own words, what you think would happen, you expert on facts and evidence, who is going to break though the matrix
My friend lives in north Houston and she could hear the sounds this thing made at 8 am
@ohmygollywow
Ай бұрын
That's not possible. This is near Brownsville, TX in Boca Chica.
@TheDaexiled1
8 күн бұрын
Probably heard a standard commercial airplane overhead, Houston is too far for the rocket's sound waves to travel
WOOT WOOT I stayed up all night watching this amazingly beautiful
Watch it multiple times, every time it still put a smile on my face, it’s so strange, I feel so proud of how far humanity have come along and also the future that are going to unfold, it’s such an exciting future 😆✨ The video missed out the best part of the ending , whereby the tiny flap hang on all the way to the end , impressive !
Самая мощная гиперзвуковая ракета в мире
Fantastic Animation
That’s the most exciting launch I have seen since the old Saturn Fives.
When the unmanned thing doesn't blow up, they get excited like it's a moon landing or something.
Engines look like LED lights.
@briansmith1371
Ай бұрын
The Raptor 2 engine is crazy powerful. The Raptor 3 even more so and it is almost ready for them to use on the future prototype tests.
@alasdairhicks6731
Ай бұрын
It's because they are. This is all fake and CGI.
@clearmomentum
Ай бұрын
@@alasdairhicks6731 I make cgi for a living... this isn't cgi.
@fosstera
Ай бұрын
@@alasdairhicks6731 You can't fake this. You can come close, as seen with productions like First Man, or the "OFT" animation from a bunch of artists here on KZread, but it won't be 100%. I'm sorry your view of the world is so sad, I hope you can one day realize the beauty of the real world, and understand that this did in fact happen
@herobrine024
Ай бұрын
@@alasdairhicks6731 I suggest you book a flight to Brownsville TX and head down to Boca Chica to watch the next test flight.
something awesome coming this way
When you realise one of those engines has enough power to make a truck go supersonic in about 2 sec
Absolutely amazing, think of all the precise calculations and math used on this, congratulations to the whole team of Space X, humanity is going to Mars!!!!!!
Outstanding!
I was watching CBS on the day of the launch and they never even mentioned the launch.
@richspillman4191
Ай бұрын
They were waiting for the cgi to dry.
@mistertagnan
Ай бұрын
The media rarely cares about rocket launches until after they happen
@localbean1441
27 күн бұрын
@@richspillman4191naw, takes some time to make a news report, ever did a writing project in school? Takes about a day
@richspillman4191
27 күн бұрын
@@localbean1441 Computers changed all that, I have lightning fast thinking, I would have had it done and out by last print, "The rocket deception wooed the masses, balloons fly, space is hard, it's so fake they think it's real."
wow. thats crazy for Starship. congratulation.
This just never gets old.
Amazing thanks
What was that at 6:50 over near the right side of the screen that looked like it flew straight up? Not saying it was anything funny, just wondering what it was.
@vinceheins
Ай бұрын
That was the jettisoned Hotstqge probably, which accelerated way slower than super heavy due to less air resistance, which is why SH is flying past it
@demetriusbarnes5001
16 күн бұрын
I was looking for this comment. Thought I was the only one to see that. It doesn't look like it's floating up to me it looks to be stationary 🤷🏾♂️
@jamiem7007
13 күн бұрын
@@demetriusbarnes5001 It was falling at a slower rate than the booster at the time, like @vinceheins said. Pretty cool we got to see it in that shot.
Absolutely amazing
You all are spreading so much joy. Thank you for being wonderful!
The Moon and Mars is one step closer! It was a magnificent test flight, looking forward to launch #5
@TrapBoiFuse561
Ай бұрын
Too bad they gotta find out next how to protect humans from the radiation ☢️
@jasongoodman3384
Ай бұрын
@TrapBoiFuse561 they already know. Bury the habitation areas. The moon regolith and Martian soil will shield from the radiation until terraforming can he completed in the case of Mars.
@TrapBoiFuse561
Ай бұрын
@@jasongoodman3384 thru space after leaving the ozone layer nobody ever survives after leaving it so they gotta solve that problem in a 100 years
@vinceheins
Ай бұрын
@@TrapBoiFuse561you can literally put a water tank on the side of starship that would be facing the sun on the flight and it would block basically any radiation
@TrapBoiFuse561
Ай бұрын
@@vinceheins before you pass away on earth u will never seee a real moon landing can’t fake it in 2024 radiation ☢️ is the real reason we can’t leave earth 🌎
What's with the engine that didn't work?
@Jaker788
Ай бұрын
Hard to say. Most likely though it's plumbing related issues, the first one that went out shortly after liftoff I don't think would be ice related but more likely pressure or something after startup was not right so it shut down for safety. The outer ring of engines cannot restart as they require ground systems to get them started, it saves a little weight. The second engine that failed on landing burn could be clogging of a filter from ice again, or gas bubbles from tank slosh, or something else. I'm not sure if this one did a safety shut down or if it blew up and was part of the debris that came out the bottom on landing burn.
@mistertagnan
Ай бұрын
In addition to what the person above me said, lighting engines is really hard - specifically one as complex as Raptor is. Historically Raptor has had teething issues as well, given it’s a new, extremely powerful and complex engine
when in the hell are we making space ships, this is very inefficient.
Thats beautiful ❤... Go humans
SpaceX has succesfully launched Starship multiple times. This time it succesfully landed it aswell.
Man you do a lot of cool stuff in the world sir Love you buddy hope to see you someday ❤❤❤
Wow ..... That's amazing!
They sure made that look easy!
Successfully launches and lands*
@ModeratelyAmused
Ай бұрын
Successfully launches and simulates* landings.
@fosstera
Ай бұрын
@@ModeratelyAmused a water landing is still a landing!
@PiDsPagePrototypes
Ай бұрын
@@fossteraYes, but it was Simulating the landing proceedure for the Tower.
What was the object in the video frame observed at a distance during the booster decent? It was large and on the right side of the frame. The altitude of the booster stage was 40 km, 6:50 into the video.
@ArunSharma-ns1ni
Ай бұрын
6.50, I also have just been wondering what that was too. Anyone have any updates, can't see this being reported anywhere else. The video is amazing and the opening drone shot fantastic.
@weekiely1233
Ай бұрын
The hot staging ring
@localbean1441
27 күн бұрын
@@weekiely1233thought it were small pieces of ice
@weekiely1233
27 күн бұрын
@@localbean1441 nope. It’s a giant metal disk Most of the spec you see are ice though
Look At The Size Of That Super Heavy!
That was a spectacular launch and splashdown! I can't wait to see when the superheavy booster makes landfall.
I was in south Padre when it launched without knowing. Talking about scared to death.
wow it mostly made it good progress
@nieznanyx
Ай бұрын
mostly? it made 2 splashdowns.
@rev1hard
Ай бұрын
@@nieznanyx 99.7% made it to splash down, still impressive and making progress
@nieznanyx
Ай бұрын
@@rev1hard you got proof that its 99.7% exactly?
@rev1hard
Ай бұрын
@@nieznanyx 99.7 is an estimate of course, possibly 2 blown engines (impressive it can take it with out losing the craft btw). A possible deployment of something when the cameras cut out, in addition the heat shield being jestisoned. Plus when you look at the damage the fins, (winglets? winlets? Finlets?) took from burn through from plasma getting past the heat shield. Its obviously not a 100% return of the craft. not a bad job, just not 100%
@Ncyphen
Ай бұрын
The goal of this flight was to simulate landing with Super Heavy (100%) and successfully survive re-entry with Starship, which it 100% did. The model of Starship launched is already obsolete, with an older, vulnerable fin design. Along with the fins, SpaceX left off 2 tiles and replaced a tile with an incorrect thickness. They wanted to see how well Starship would react when damaged during re-entry. I assume they were shocked when Starship was still able to belly flop with all that damage to the 4 fins.
I think it's crazy to think that we will literally be able to utilize this to traverse our own globe in minutes instead of hours or days one day.
This is sooo beautiful
Is this the one with the 33 jets on it?
@SamScott99
Ай бұрын
Rockets*
@GordonTurnerr
Ай бұрын
@@SamScott99 don't waste your time educating them
@dianafarmer5445
Ай бұрын
@@SamScott99 Thanks.
@CatskillProduction
Ай бұрын
@@SamScott99 33 Raptor two engines on the booster and 3 vacuum and 3 atmospheric raptor two engines
@SamScott99
Ай бұрын
@@GordonTurnerr she seems nice
I dont think a majority of people understand what is happening here. We basically just sent a future reusable skyscraper to Space!! That is so cool! And it happened on my birthday a past dark day because of D-Day Normandy happening that day in 1944. This is a milestone that will ADVANCE our civilization as long as we can focus on helping each other and work together instead of against!
Incredible!
So...the Earth isn't flat???
@graywilde5498
Ай бұрын
correct. we've known this since centuries ago
@User_5tjk42gj9
Ай бұрын
@@graywilde5498Millenia ago.
@handsomeman-pm9vy
25 күн бұрын
Mildly impressive but you Earthlings have got much to learn before you can join us in Alfa Centauri Solar system.
How is it possible that someone with an alien number who arrived in this country like Elon does this and NASA and Boeing are in the process of launching space launches?😂😂❤❤
@miguelolvera5993
Ай бұрын
Bro it’s hilarious 😂
@Iwantalloftheinformation
Ай бұрын
Well to be honest I think the military industrial complex is the real space program of our government, and think they have even more money than Spacex.
@Martin-117
Ай бұрын
Because those companies have prioritized profits before people.
@TimeMasterOG
Ай бұрын
Because those companies are under government check while space X is ran on its own budget
All 13!!
Thank you, CBS for providing space news AND Taylor Tomlinson ^_^
I can't believe we are actually on the cusp of REAL interplanetary human travel! The iterative manufacturing SpaceX is using is genius! Let's Gooooooooo!!!!!
@HamptonGuitars
Ай бұрын
It melted down, but landed somehow.
@handsomeman-pm9vy
25 күн бұрын
Mildly impressive but you Earthlings have got much to learn before you can join us in Alfa Centauri Solar system.
Amazing achievement by Elon and SpaceX. Wondering if we will see a Mars test landing soon. Can they send autonomous robotics to 3D print a landing pad on an unmanned mission?
I'm surprised they don't use a titanium webnet to totally block in the tiles other than them being glued in place through the thermal expansion and shrinkage
Just incredible
Fishes in Gulf of Mexico must be scared to death today.
@Bpg5012trick
Ай бұрын
They would well cooked or boiled.
Could you imagine NASA trying this. It would take another 100 years.
So awesome
incredible footage!!!
I'm just here for the copium from Elon and SpaceX haters.
@soggy_burrito
Ай бұрын
get a hobby
@dannyarcher6370
Ай бұрын
@@soggy_burrito It's as good a hobby as any...
earths flat
@ashhawk2346
15 күн бұрын
Get a grip
hell yes
Space the final frontier
Coolest thing I've seen on mainstream media for as long as I can remember...
Absolutely awesome
Спасибо от всей души! 🇺🇿
I can't imagine what the first ones going to Mars are going to be thinking the night before launch. WILD
Incredible 👍🔥💙
Incredible 😮
0:35 The footage we get of these launches is just jaw dropping. Imagine once we start doing stuff on the moon and Mars. It's going to be hard to believe what we're seeing.
Its always exciting
What a time to be alive💚