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SpaceX launches rocket from Florida carrying Starlink satellites

SpaceX launches rocket from Florida carrying Starlink satellites

Yahoo14-05-2025

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (WFLA) — SpaceX launched a rocket carrying over two dozen Starlink satellites into orbit on Wednesday.
Falcon 9 blasted off from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station at 12:38 p.m.
The rocket carried 28 Starlink satellites into low-Earth orbit before returning to the surface, landing in the Atlantic Ocean on the A Shortfall of Gravitas drone ship.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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A Japan-based firm will attempt to land on the moon. Here's why its lander spent months, not days, in space
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Nearly five months ago, a SpaceX rocket launched out of Florida carrying two lunar landers. The Blue Ghost spacecraft, from Texas-based Firefly Aerospace, zoomed to the moon, and in March it became the first robotic commercial vehicle to land upright on the lunar surface. The other spacecraft, developed by Japan-based company Ispace, is just now arriving at its destination. Resilience, as the uncrewed lunar lander is called, is on track to make its touchdown attempt at 3:24 p.m. ET on Thursday — three months after its rideshare buddy made history. Ispace isn't too concerned about losing out on a 'first' superlative. And company executives said that taking a slow and steady path to the moon can offer Ispace some long-term advantages. 'What is good about this four- or five-month trajectory is, every day, there are small things that happen … something we didn't expect,' Ispace Chief Financial Officer Jumpei Nozaki told CNN in January. 'This (journey to the moon) is really a learning phase.' Three teams of Ispace employees have been rotating in and out of the company's mission control room in Tokyo, racking up months' worth of practice in overseeing the unpredictable and daring physics of deep-space travel — a rare opportunity, the company's founder and CEO, Takeshi Hakamada, told CNN. Such a gradual approach to the moon does not, however, guarantee landing success. Ispace's first attempt to put a spacecraft on the lunar surface ended with a crash landing in April 2023 after a 4 ½-month journey from Earth. Ultimately, Resilience's long trajectory offers Ispace both pros and cons. Resilience is on a path to the moon that's often referred to as a low-energy transfer. It's essentially a slow, cruising route — much like traveling to a friend's house on a bike and coasting on the downhills, using little fuel or energy. 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A Japan-based firm will attempt to land on the moon. Here's why its lander spent months, not days, in space
A Japan-based firm will attempt to land on the moon. Here's why its lander spent months, not days, in space

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Why Redwire Stock Is Rocketing Higher Today
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