On Thursday,The Relic Of My Sister Next Door as Hurricane Irma makes its way toward Florida for possible landfall this weekend, SpaceX managed to launch a secret, un-crewed space plan for the U.S. Air Force — just in the nick of time.
The Elon Musk-founded company lofted the X-37B space plane to orbit atop a Falcon 9 rocket at 10 a.m. ET from Cape Canaveral, Florida. About 10 minutes later, the first stage of the rocket came in for a picture-perfect landing back on a pad at the Cape.
SEE ALSO: SpaceX just launched a secret military space plane and then landed a rocket back on EarthDue to the secret nature of the Air Force program, SpaceX wasn't able to show the space plane actually getting into orbit, and we don't know much about what the X-37B is going to do up there.
We do know that the experimental program is designed to help work out the kinks in reusable spacecraft, and there are two X-37B vehicles, built by Boeing.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The space planes aren't very large, clocking in at 29 feet long and 9 feet 6 inches high, but they are able to stay in orbit for months or even years.
The X-37B mission that ended in May lasted for 718 days in space.
Though we don't know much about the X-37B's mission specifics, we do know a little bit about where it's going in orbit thanks to SpaceX.
The company was able to land the first stage of its rocket back on solid ground instead of a drone ship in the ocean. SpaceX can only perform these land landings if its payload is relatively light or if it's heavy and going to a low orbit.
The Air Force hasn't yet disclosed when the X-37B will come back to Earth.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Misshapen strawberry finally gets the Photoshop battle it always wanted
Snake makes a sudden appearance on driver's sssssside window
Alleged ‘Shitty Media Men’ list creator steps forward, Twitter erupts
Best power station deal: Save $170 on Anker 535 Portable Power Station
Jodie Whittaker is officially leaving 'Doctor Who' in 2022
Olympic gymnasts tired of being objectified swap leotards for bodysuits
Riley the dog will sniff out pests at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。