来源:Ars Technica · 科技 · 北美洲 · 05-12 19:00

Once again, SpaceX has set a new record for the tallest rocket ever built

阅读原文 →

AI 摘要

这条新闻显示「Once again, SpaceX has set a new record for the tallest rocket ever built」正在成为 科技产业 方向的新信号,值得结合 北美洲 与 科技 后续动态继续观察。

关键点

  • 核心事件:Once again, SpaceX has set a new record for the tallest rocket ever built
  • 所属领域:科技 / 科技产业
  • 观察维度:北美洲、Ars Technica 后续报道与同类事件是否继续增加

影响分析

短期可能影响产品路线、开发者生态与产业链预期;若同类新闻继续增加,可能形成新的科技主题。

情绪:中性偏积极 · 相关:Ars Technica / 科技 / 北美洲 / 科技产业 · 模板回退

For the third time in three years, SpaceX has stacked a new version of its enormous Starship rocket on a launch pad in South Texas, just a few miles north of the US-Mexico border. The newest-generation Starship, known as Starship Version 3, is taller and more powerful than the ones that came before it. The upgrades on Starship are numerous. Perhaps the most notable changes are higher-thrust, more efficient Raptor engines on the Super Heavy booster and Starship upper stage, a new reusable lattice-like structure at the top of the booster for hot staging, and three—not four—modified grid fins to help bring the first stage back to Earth for recovery and reuse. If all goes according to plan, this is the version of Starship that SpaceX will use to begin experimenting with in-orbit refueling, a capability engineers must master before sending ships anywhere farther than low-Earth orbit. In the near-term, refueling will enable Starships to fly to the Moon to serve as landers for NASA's Artemis program. Starship remains an iterative development program, and new versions are in the pipeline, but Starship V3 should mark a step toward SpaceX actually using Starships in space, rather than solely proving they can get there and get home.Read full article Comments

阅读原文 →