Starship begins taking shape: Elon Musk shares new photos showing the 'backbone' of orbital rocket that could one day take humans to Mars
- SpaceX CEO, Elon Musk, shared images of Starship prototype on Twitter
- Orbital rocket is set to carryout commercial flights in 2021
- FCC filing shows the company wants to test the ship 12.5 miles into the air
- Elon Musk says the test could happen as soon as October
It seems Elon Musk cannot wait to share SpaceX's orbital Starship prototype with the world.
The Tesla tycoon posted a pair of photos to his Twitter page, showing the progress of what is set 'to be the backbone' of the business.
Starship is expected to carryout commercial flights in orbit around 2021, with the goal of one day traveling to Mars.
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It seems Elon Musk cannot wait to share SpaceX's orbital Starship prototype with the world. The Tesla tycoon posted a pair of photos to his Twitter page, showing the progress of what is set 'to be the backbone' of the business
And it seems Musk is not wasting anytime.
Earlier this month, an FCC filing surfaced that revealed SpaceX is ready to launch into the next testing phase for its Starship.
In the request, the Elon Musk-owned aerospace company is requesting permission to fly Starship more than 12 miles into orbit and then land the craft back down in the same spot.
The feat would mark a significant leap for the company, which recently completed a successful series of tests on Starship prototype, Starhopper, and gives new insight into just how close the company is to completing the vehicle.

Starship is expected to carryout commercial flights in orbit around 2021, with the goal of one day traveling to Mars. Earlier this month, an FCC filing surfaced that revealed SpaceX is ready to launch into the next testing phase for its Starship
Musk has previously alluded to an event later this month which could act as the unveiling of the craft and foreshadow a test launch in October.
SpaceX employees in Texas have been hard at work building the first iteration of the craft, the MK1, while a concurrent team in Florida is also in the midst of building a similar MK2 rocket with a different design and specs.
FCC filings indicate that the company will be looking to conduct the launch out of its site in Boca Chica texas where, according to Business Insider, SpaceX was recently granted permission to expand the facility in anticipation of future launches.

The feat would mark a significant leap for the company, which recently completed a successful series of tests on Starship prototype (pictured is a render), Starhopper, and gives new insight into just how close the company is to completing the vehicle
The company is looking to build on a series of successful tests from Starhopper which most recently saw the craft hover more than 100 meters into the air and safely return to the launch platform.
SpaceX hopes its style of reusable rocket will mark a major breakthrough in aerospace technology that will eventually make exploration cheaper and more sustainable.

The Elon Musk -owned aerospace company is requesting permission to fly Starship more than 12 miles into orbit and then land the craft back down in the same spot

SpaceX's successful tests of Starhopper (pictured above) marked a major step for the company which had never flown the craft into the air without a tether prior to a launch in July
Ultimately, Musk hopes that the company's Starship could help humans reach Mars for the first time and has set an optimistic timeline for when the experimental craft might be able to do so.
The first crewed Red Planet mission for the rocket and 100-passenger Starship could come as early as the mid-2020s if development and testing go well, Musk has said
Additional missions may even include tourists trips to the moon by 2024, according to the CEO.
Completing a successful mission to the moon would also mark an incremental step in Musk's other vision of traveling to Mars.