SPACEX

SpaceX Achieves a Rocket-Reuse Milestone With Internet Satellite Launch

The Falcon 9 rocket used in Tuesday morning's launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida has been used in five previous missions. Six missions is a first.

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Southern California-based SpaceX set a record for the reuse of its workhorse Falcon 9 rockets Tuesday when it launched another batch of internet satellites into orbit.

The Falcon 9 rocket used in Tuesday morning's launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida has been used in five previous missions. It became the first to ever be successfully launched and recovered six times when it landed on a platform at sea minutes after blast off.

Tuesday's mission, which lifted off at 7:31 a.m. California time, sent 58 Starlink satellites into orbit, continuing to build SpaceX founder Elon Musk's planned worldwide internet array offering low-cost broadband access to traditionally under-served areas.

Roughly 600 Starlink satellites are already in orbit.

Tuesday's launch will also deploy three Earth-imaging satellites for a private company known as Planet. Those three satellites will be deployed into orbit first -- about 12 and a half minutes after liftoff -- followed by the Starlink satellites 46 minutes after liftoff, according to SpaceX.

After launch and second-stage separation, the first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket will be maneuvered back to Earth, landing on a droneship dubbed "Of Course I Still Love You" floating in the Atlantic Ocean.

The Falcon 9 first stage was first used in a satellite launch in September 2018. It was used again in a January 2019 launch, then again in three more Starlink satellite launches, in May 2019, January 2020 and June 2020, according to SpaceX.

Several Falcon 9 rockets have flown five missions for SpaceX, but this will be the first to fly six times.

Recovering rockets has become a hallmark of SpaceX flights, designed to slash the cost of missions by reusing the equipment in future launches.

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