Elon Musk sees 'fighting chance' for unmanned mission to Mars by 2024
SpaceX founder Elon Musk is “80-90 % confident” that the company’s massive new Starship rocket will reach orbit next year and said there’s a chance it will be ready for an uncrewed cargo mission to Mars in 2024.
The original test flights will be difficult and carry a higher risk of failure, Mr Musk said on Friday at a virtual session of the Mars Society’s 2020 conference. “We’ll probably lose a few ships before we get the atmospheric return and landing right,” he said.
Mr Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies is building prototypes of the huge rocket in Boca Chica, Texas, to further his ambition of establishing a self-sustaining city on Mars. The business has also won a NASA contract for a human landing system on the moon using the brand new vehicle.
Mr Musk predicted that Starship could possibly be ready to test orbital refueling in 2022, a significant milestone for vehicles wanting to transport cargo to the moon and Mars. But he conceded that his estimated dates for the rocket’s progress “are simply guesses, obviously”, and could change.
“It’s not like I've all these secret dates and I’m just keeping them from people,” he said. To date, the new rocket has completed at least two successful 150-meter (492-foot) test hops. Starship is designed to carry heavy payloads around the solar system and hold as much as 100 people.
Beyond the orbital test flights, Mr Musk said SpaceX has “a fighting chance” to be prepared to send a Starship payload to Mars - without persons - in 2024. That's also the entire year NASA wants to return astronauts to the moon.
Earth and Mars reach their closest proximity every 26 months, the normal cycle when the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and other government space agencies launch science missions to the earth.
Source: www.thenationalnews.com