Briefing | Filling up space

The rockets are nifty, but it is satellites that make SpaceX valuable

Elon Musk’s space venture may soon be more valuable than Tesla

A long exposure image showing the satelitte filled sky
Photograph: Alan Dyer/VWPics/Redux/Eyevine

There was no mistaking the feat of engineering. The bottom half of the biggest object ever flown—by itself as tall as a 747 is long—came hurtling out of the sky so fast that it glowed from the friction. With the ground rushing to meet it, a cluster of its engines briefly relit, slowing the rocket and guiding it carefully back towards the same steel tower from which it had launched just seven minutes previously. A pair of arms swang closed to catch it, leaving it suspended and smoking in the early-morning sunshine.

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This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline “Filling up space”

From the October 19th 2024 edition

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