The disintegration of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket shortly after it launched on a space station resupply mission for NASA last month was most likely caused by a faulty strut inside the booster’s upper stage, company CEO and founder Elon Musk said Monday (July 20).
Every Falcon 9 launches with hundreds of such struts aboard, Musk said. Both stages of the two-stage rocket harbor many bottles that store helium at cryogenic temperatures. During flight, this helium flows to the engines, where it is warmed; the substance is then recirculated to the booster’s liquid-oxygen and fuel tanks to repressurize and structurally stabilize them, compensating for the volume of fuel and oxidizer lost during flight. []
sources these struts from an outside company and will probably change suppliers now, Musk added. In addition, SpaceX plans to individually test and certify every strut that will fly, to ensure that no faulty ones make it on board, he said.
This assessment of the failure is preliminary rather than definitive, Musk said, stressing that the investigation of the mishap is ongoing.
Still, he added, “right now, there doesn’t seem to be any other explanation that could make sense.”
The Falcon 9 launched from Florida’s Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on June 28 carrying SpaceX’s robotic on the company’s seventh contracted cargo mission to the space station. SpaceX holds a $1.6 billion NASA deal to make at least 12 such flights; the first six missions had all been completely successful.
Dragon would almost certainly have survived the incident intact if its onboard software had been geared to allow parachute deployment so early in the flight, Musk added. (Dragon cargo capsules make parachute-aided ocean splashdowns after completing their missions.) []
The delay and decrease in flight rate resulting from the mishap will probably end up costing SpaceX hundreds of millions of dollars, Musk added. In addition, the ongoing focus on the Falcon 9 will likely push the highly anticipated first flight of the company’s huge into spring 2016 at the earliest.
The June 28 Falcon 9 explosion was the third failure of a robotic cargo mission to the space station in less than a year. In October 2014, Orbital ATK’s Antares rocket blew up seconds after lifting off, ending the company’s third resupply run for NASA under a $1.9 billion deal. And in May, Russia’s fell back to Earth without reaching the space station, victimized by a problem with the third stage of its Soyuz rocket.
“Each one of these failure modes has been quite different,” said. “It just goes to show—rockets are a fundamentally difficult thing.”
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