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SpaceX Starlink rocket launch Memorial Day weekend: Where to watch in Sebastian, Vero Beach

SpaceX Starlink rocket launch Memorial Day weekend: Where to watch in Sebastian, Vero Beach

Yahoo22-05-2025

Can a rocket launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida, be seen farther south, in Treasure Coast skies?
If the conditions are right, yes! And when this 'so Florida' thing occurs, it's very Instagram-worthy.
Though rockets here launch from NASA's Kennedy Space Center near Merritt Island, Florida, or Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, people from the Treasure Coast can sometimes see this phenomenon.
Weather permitting and depending on cloud cover, a rocket launch from Florida's Space Coast could be visible from Jacksonville Beach and Daytona Beach to Vero Beach and West Palm Beach (see videos and photo gallery with this story). When there's a launch window in the middle of the night or very early morning, there's an opportunity for unique photos — the rocket lights up the dark sky and the contrail after makes for a great photo.
Below is more information on rocket launches in Florida and suggestions on where to watch them from the Treasure Coast.
Rocket launch tally: Here's a list of all 2025 missions from Cape Canaveral, Florida (psst, there's a lot)
For questions or comments, email FLORIDA TODAY Space Reporter Rick Neale at rneale@floridatoday.com or Space Reporter Brooke Edwards at bedwards@floridatoday.com. For more space news from the USA TODAY Network, visit floridatoday.com/space.
Mission: SpaceX will launch a payload of Starlink satellites on a Falcon 9 rocket into low-Earth orbit, a Federal Aviation Administration operations plan advisory indicates.
Launch window: 1:19 p.m. to 5:50 p.m. ET on Saturday, May 24, 2025
Launch location: Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station
Sonic booms: No
Trajectory: Southeast
Live coverage starts 90 minutes before liftoff at : You can watch live rocket launch coverage from USA TODAY Network's Space Team, which consists of FLORIDA TODAY space reporters Rick Neale and Brooke Edwards and visuals journalists Craig Bailey, Malcolm Denemark and Tim Shortt. Our Space Team will provide up-to-the-minute updates in a mobile-friendly live blog, complete with a countdown clock, at floridatoday.com/space, starting 90 minutes before liftoff. You can download the free FLORIDA TODAY app, which is available in the App Store or Google Play, or type into your browser.
Dinner with a view: Treasure Coast restaurants with views of the ocean or river — and a rocket launch
Sebastian Inlet State Park, 9700 S. State Road A1A, Melbourne Beach, Florida (cost to enter)
Wabasso Beach Park, 1808 Wabasso Beach Road, Wabasso, Florida
Ambersands Beach Park, 12566 N. SR A1A, Vero Beach, Florida (free parking)
South Beach Park, 1700 Ocean Drive, Vero Beach, Florida (free parking)
Merrill Barber Bridge in Vero Beach, Florida
Alma Lee Loy Bridge in Vero Beach, Florida
Fort Pierce Inlet State Park, 905 Shorewinds Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
Blind Creek Beachside North and South, 5460 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
Blue Heron Beach, 2101 Blue Heron Blvd., Fort Pierce, Florida
Frederick Douglass Memorial Park, 3600 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
Dollman Park Beachside, 9200 S. Ocean Drive, Jensen Beach, Florida
Herman's Bay Beach, 7880 S. Ocean Drive, Jensen Beach, Florida
John Brooks Park Beachside, 3300 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
Middle Cove Beach, 4600 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
Normandy Beach in Jensen Beach, Florida
Pepper Park Beachside, 3302 N. SR A1A, Fort Pierce, Florida
Walton Rocks Beach, 6700 S. Ocean Drive, Jensen Beach, Florida (dog park)
Waveland Beach, 10350 S. Ocean Drive, Jensen Beach, Florida
State Road A1A causeway in Stuart, Florida
House of Refuge and beach, 301 S.E. MacArthur Blvd., Stuart, Florida
This article originally appeared on Treasure Coast Newspapers: SpaceX rocket launch: Best places to see from Ft Pierce, Jensen Beach

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The Company Helping Build the Next Space Station Is Launching to the ISS
The Company Helping Build the Next Space Station Is Launching to the ISS

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The Company Helping Build the Next Space Station Is Launching to the ISS

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The last Indian citizen in space was Rakesh Sharma, who was aboard another Soyuz, which docked with Russia's Salyut 7 space station in 1984. For Poland the wait has been longest of all, dating back to 1978, when Mirosław Hermaszewski launched aboard a Soyuz. 'Private astronaut missions are a great opportunity for our member states to fly more astronauts and do more experiments aboard the International Space Station,' said Sergio Palumberi, mission manager with the European Space Agency (ESA)—which includes Hungary and Poland—at the May 20 press conference. 'ESA will be executing 17 science investigations and technological demonstrations.' 'This is more than a space mission for us,' said Orsolya Ferencz, Hungary's ministerial commissioner of space research. 'It is a strategic national effort, an expression of Hungary's commitment to sovereignty in critical technological fields and to secure a place in the rapidly evolving space economy.' 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Kapu will do 25 experiments for Hungary while also using half of his personal luggage space to bring something that pays homage to the first Hungarian who flew to space in 1978. 'There was a teddy bear which is wearing a cosmonaut space suit. This teddy bear is from a Hungarian TV show for kids,' he said, noting it went along for the ride nearly 50 years ago. 'I'm really proud to fly that again.' It won't be the only stuffed animal on the flight. The other is a swan called Joy, named by Kapu, that will function as the crew's 'zero-gravity indicator' — traditionally an object that lets astronauts know they've reached space as it begins to float around after launch. Whitson teased the swan's connection to the name reveal for the Crew Dragon capsule. The first four Crew Dragons were named Endeavour, Resilience, Endurance and Freedom. 'The reason we selected this one might become more obvious once you hear the name of the vehicle,' she said. 'You'll have to wait for that one.'

Japanese lunar lander crashes while attempting touchdown on the Moon
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