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SpaceX Starship Super Heavy booster, launch tower take shape
spaceflightinsider.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from spaceflightinsider.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
NASA s InSight Mars lander solar panels cleared of some dust
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Spaceflight Insider
Cullen Desforges
June 9th, 2021
The shadow of the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter as it completes its seventh flight on Mars. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Fresh off of a recent in-flight anomaly, the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter lifted off of the Martian surface around noon local time on sol 107 (June 8, 2021) of the Perseverance rover mission. It then flew some 350 feet (about 106 meters) south of its liftoff spot before coming to rest at its new base of operations. The total flight time was 62.8 seconds.
According to NASA, this was the second time the helicopter landed at an airfield it did not survey from the air during a previous flight. For flight seven, scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory took advantage of imagery collected from the HiRISE camera aboard the space agency’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
Spaceflight Insider
Cullen Desforges
May 15th, 2021
The New Zealand launch site for Rocket Lab, where the 20th Electron mission, “Running Out Of Toes” launched on May 15, 2021. The mission payload was lost following a flight anomaly following stage separation. Credit: Rocket Lab
Rocket Lab successfully launched its Electron rocket from the shores of New Zealand on May 15 at 11:11 UTC, but unfortunately suffered an unexpected anomaly during staging.
Affectionately dubbed “Running Out of Toes,” the Electron rocket assigned to fly the 20
th mission of the type lifted to the skies from Launch Complex-1 at the company’s launch site in New Zealand. After pushing the rocket into stage separation, the first stage made its way back to earth via parachute before splashing down into the Pacific Ocean. It was then recovered by what Rocket Lab refers to as ‘ORCA’, or Ocean Recovery and Capture Apparatus.
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