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HomeTechnologyA close-up view of two Falcon rockets landing, as majestic as you...

A close-up view of two Falcon rockets landing, as majestic as you might imagine

Floating Falcons —

This is the first time SpaceX has invited photographers to set up the Florida landing zone remote.

Eric Berger

    On Tuesday morning, two Falcon rockets returned to Habitat space after launching a military mission to the United States.

    Trevor Malman

    A recent close-up of the booster burns a Merlin engine to slow it down.

    Trevor Malman

  • Two falcons almost fell to the ground.

    Trevor Malman

    This photo shows this week in Florida Two side-mounted boosters for the landing of the Falcon Heavy by the state.

    Trevor Malman

    A Falcon Heavy rocket launched from Kennedy Space Center on Tuesday morning, carrying a pair of The number of satellites in geostationary orbit by the U.S. Space Force. This is the fourth overall launch of the Falcon Heavy, But this marks the first time SpaceX has invited a handful of photographers to set up remote cameras next to Landing Zone 2 at the Space Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida. This is one of two concrete pads that occasionally land on a Falcon 9 rocket launched from Florida. Each circular landing pad with a diameter of 86 meters is Busy with a pair of side boosters returning from a Falcon Heavy launch Tuesday morning. After separation from the heavy rocket’s core stage, the boosters then underwent a propulsive descent. The first touchdown was 8 minutes and 15 seconds after launch. The second followed five seconds later. Trevor Malman, shot for Ars, is the subject of One of the people invited to capture touchdown moments. The official footage of the launch and landing is impressive, but Marman’s footage (and video) does a good job of capturing the rocket’s flames and fury, as a single engine burns down the rocket’s velocity to near zero. SpaceX will now refurbish these side boosters for use in the military Fang’s next Falcon Heavy mission to the USSF is to reuse the -67, as early as January next year. The central core was not recovered and landed in the far reaches of the Atlantic Ocean.
    Listing image by Trevor Mahlmann
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