- SpaceX's giant Falcon Heavy rocket blasts off, paving way to colonization of the Red Planet.
The Falcon Heavy rose from the same launch pad used by Nasa nearly 50 years ago to send men to the moon. With liftoff, the Heavy became the most powerful rocket in use today, doubling the liftoff punch of its closest competitor.
For SpaceX, the private rocket company run by Elon Musk, it was a mostly triumphant test of a new, larger rocket designed to hoist supersize satellites as well as equipment to the moon, Mars or other far-flung points. For the test flight, a red sports car made by another of Musk's companies, Tesla, was the unusual cargo, enclosed in protective covering for the launch.
The three boosters and 27 engines roared to life at Kennedy Space Centre, as thousands watched from surrounding areas. Millions more watched online, making it the second biggest livestream in YouTube history.
Viewers were left with video images beamed from space of Musk's red Roadster circling the blue planet after the protective covering had dropped away and exposed the car. A space-suited mannequin was at the wheel, named "Starman" after the David Bowie song.
"It's kind of silly and fun, but I think that silly and fun things are important," said the SpaceX chief. "The imagery of it is something that's going to get people excited around the world."
Two of the boosters- both recycled from previous launches - returned minutes after liftoff for on-the-mark touchdowns at Cape Canaveral.
Musk later revealed the third booster, brand new, slammed into the Atlantic at 300mph and missed the floating landing platform, scattering shrapnel all over the deck and knocking out two engines.
He was unfazed by the lost booster and said watching the other two land upright probably was the most exciting thing he's ever seen.
Before liftoff, "I had this image of just a giant explosion on the pad, a wheel bouncing down the road, the Tesla logo landing somewhere", he said. "But fortunately, that's not what happened."
Musk's rocketing Roadster is shooting for a solar orbit that will reach all the way to Mars.
Ballast for a rocket debut is usually concrete - "so boring", Musk said in a post-launch news conference.
The Roadster was anything but. Cameras mounted on the car fed stunning video of
"Starman" tooling around Earth, looking something like a NASCAR racer out for a Sunday drive, with its right hand on the wheel and the left arm resting on the car's door.
A sign on the dashboard read: "Don't panic!" Bowie's "Life on Mars?" played in the background at one point. A Hot Wheels roadster was also on the dash with a tiny spaceman on board.
The Falcon Heavy is a combination of three Falcon 9s, the rocket that the company uses to ship supplies to the International Space Station and lift satellites.
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