The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has authorized SpaceX’s Starship vehicle to return to flight operations, despite an ongoing investigation into the mishap of Starship Flight 7 in January. SpaceX has been cleared to launch the Starship Flight 8 mission from Boca Chica, Texas, after completing the required safety review. The upcoming mission includes a return of the Super Heavy booster for a catch attempt and a water landing of the Starship vehicle in the Indian Ocean.
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- The FAA has approved SpaceX to launch Starship Flight 8 after the mishap of Flight 7 on January 16.
- SpaceX completed a required safety review before receiving the authorization to proceed.
- The upcoming flight includes a return attempt of the Super Heavy booster rocket to the launch tower.
- The mission also plans for a water landing of the Starship vehicle in the Indian Ocean, west of Australia.
- SpaceX aims to launch as early as Monday, with hardware and operational upgrades to improve the vehicle’s reliability.
- The FAA confirmed that SpaceX met all safety, environmental, and licensing requirements for the suborbital flight.
- Flight 7, which ended in a mishap minutes after launch, sent debris over the northern Caribbean, forcing flight diversions.
- The new flight will follow the same suborbital trajectory but target objectives that were missed in previous tests.
- SpaceX has upgraded Starship’s forward flaps to improve reentry heat resistance and simplify protective mechanisms.
- The FAA proposed a $633,000 fine in September for SpaceX’s failure to meet license requirements for two 2023 launches.




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