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Less than a week after its eye catching Starship IFT-3, SpaceX has shared details about when the next test might take place. SpaceX's President and COO Gwynne Shotwell gave the opening keynote at the Satellite 2024's opening session today, and in response to a question, she revealed that while SpaceX is still parsing through the data from last week's flight attempt, the next test can take place as soon as in May. Shotwell added that the Starship test flight was not orbital by design, and SpaceX hopes to successfully manage reentry in its next flight attempt.
The SpaceX president's talk and responses to questions at Satellite 2024 covered SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet constellation and its Starship rocket. Shotwell outlined that SpaceX plans to commercialize Starlink satellite lasers later this year, with the service first expected to be announced as part of the upcoming Polaris Dawn private crew mission of the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft.
Her comments for the Starship test flight saw Shotwell explain that her company is still "going through the data" after taking the weekend off. Starship IFT-3 was not orbital on purpose, according to the SpaceX COO, as SpaceX "wanted to make sure [Starship] could passively come back on a trajectory that we could count on if we didn't relight the second stage engine a second time . . to re-enter."
For Starship IFT-4, Shotwell shared:
SpaceX's immediate objectives are"getting re-entry right" and ensuring that Starship is able to land at its designated sites. Unlike the Falcon 9, Starship is designed to be 'caught' by its launch tower by the massive chopsticks on the launch pad. These
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