In its latest audacious mission to retrieve rockets after
launch, SpaceX fell just short with its center core booster overshooting
the sea-based landing pad, crashing into the water with a fiery
explosion.
Saturn (destruction) square Zeus (fire). Mercury (coordination (overshooting
the sea-based landing pad)) conjunct Vulcanus (explosion) square Apollon (success (apart from that fiery end
the mission was a success)).
The company’s third Falcon Heavy launch was dubbed its “most difficult launch ever,”
given the multitude of satellites, deployments and ‘moving parts’
within the mission. Everything was going well, with full deployment of
its payload and the safe landing of both side booster rockets. But then
the mission hit a rather explosive
(Vulcanus)
snag.
The two Falcon Heavy side boosters were reused for the first time and
will live to fly another day, which is more than can be said for the
central core.
Apart from that fiery end
(Zeus), the mission was a success (Apollon) with the launch of
some 24 satellites and the ‘cremains,’ or cremated remains (Hades), of 152
people on board (at a cost of $5,000 per gram of ashes), including those
of Apollo program support astronaut Bill Pogue.
Among the satellites launched was a solar sail test satellite; a deep
space Atomic Clock, and a new type of green propellant for NASA.
Source: rt.com
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