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USA: Dozens of passenger planes forced to divert to avoid Starship wreckage

They were forced to land at airports other than their destination or diverted to avoid the wreckage

Newsroom January 17 04:24

 

The SpaceX Starship rocket exploded and disintegrated in space a few minutes after its launch yesterday, Thursday, from Texas, forcing passenger aircraft flights over the Gulf of Mexico to change course to avoid debris falling to Earth, marking a setback for Elon Musk’s flagship rocket program.

SpaceX mission control lost contact with the upgraded Starship, which was carrying a payload of mock satellites but no crew, eight minutes after its launch from South Texas facilities at 5:38 p.m. local time (12:38 a.m. Friday, Greek time).

IFT-7 Starship final moments from the perspective of an airplane.pic.twitter.com/kHlHsewmq9

— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) January 17, 2025

Videos showed bright orange spheres streaking across the sky above Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti, leaving trails of smoke. “We’ve lost all communication with the vehicle – this tells us we had an anomaly with the upper stage,” SpaceX Communications Director Dan Huot said, later confirming that the rocket was lost.

Cockpit video captures falling debris near Turks and Caicos after SpaceX's Starship broke apart during a test flight.

Aircraft-tracking website Flightradar24 shared on X that the Starship explosion caused its most tracked flights to be “all aircraft holding or diverting to avoid… pic.twitter.com/csMbfFPmED

— Breaking Aviation News & Videos (@aviationbrk) January 17, 2025

Dozens of commercial flights were forced to land at airports other than their destinations or altered their course to avoid the debris, according to the FlightRadar24 website. Departures from airports in Miami and Fort Lauderdale, Florida, also experienced 45-minute delays, it added.

Damn a whole lot of planes had to divert to avoid falling debris from Starship flight 7. pic.twitter.com/7yOa6uhH8N

— Nick Mark MD (@nickmmark) January 17, 2025

SpaceX CEO Musk posted a video on X showing the debris crossing the sky and wrote: “Success is not certain, but fun is guaranteed!”

Success is uncertain, but entertainment is guaranteed! ✨
pic.twitter.com/nn3PiP8XwG

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 16, 2025

The rocket’s upper stage, the Starship, which was 2 meters taller than previous versions of the rocket, was described by SpaceX as a “next-generation vehicle with significant upgrades” before the test. It was supposed to perform a controlled descent into the Indian Ocean about an hour after its launch from Texas.

A SpaceX Starship rocket broke apart in space minutes after launching from Texas, forcing airline flights over the Gulf of Mexico to alter course to avoid falling debris and setting back Elon Musk's flagship rocket program https://t.co/I7xw1zLfVn pic.twitter.com/lUBhSPD4dB

— Reuters (@Reuters) January 17, 2025

Musk stated that, based on preliminary assessments, an internal liquid oxygen leak increased pressure, causing the rocket to break apart.

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This test was the seventh for Starship since 2023. It is part of Musk’s multibillion-dollar effort to build a rocket capable of transporting humans and cargo to Mars and deploying large constellations of satellites in Earth’s orbit.

However, the rocket’s large booster, the Super Heavy, returned to the launch pad approximately seven minutes after liftoff, as planned, slowing its descent from space using its Raptor engines and performing a complex maneuver to latch onto giant metal arms attached to a launch tower.

Mechazilla has caught the Super Heavy booster! pic.twitter.com/aq91TloYzY

— SpaceX (@SpaceX) January 16, 2025

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