SpaceX, the aerospace manufacturer founded by Elon Musk, has released the 5-minute animation video that takes viewers on a journey from Starbase, SpaceX’s facility on Texas’ Gulf Coast, to Mars.
The video begins with a flyover of Starbase before transitioning to the launch of the Starship, the most powerful rocket ever built, from the seaside site. The 33-engine Super Heavy first stage, which is fully reusable, then lands softly atop its orbital launch mount.
The Starship upper stage meets up with a tanker in Earth orbit to load up on fuel for the long trip to Mars. The video then shows the Starship landing safely on the Red Planet, alongside three other vehicles. The animation ends with a view from inside the Starship, with four spacesuit-clad passengers looking out upon a Red Planet landscape speckled with lights surrounding a big domed habitat.
The Starship will be the backbone of SpaceX’s deep-space exploration efforts, and its fully reusable design is a breakthrough that could make bold spaceflight feats like Mars colonization economically feasible. The rocket has yet to fly more than a few miles above Earth’s surface, but SpaceX is gearing up to launch the first-ever orbital test flight of the vehicle, which could lift off as soon as next week, according to Elon Musk.
If the orbital trial and further flights go well, SpaceX will start working to send the stainless-steel vehicle much farther afield. The company has already been selected by NASA to develop the first crewed lander for its Artemis moon program, with an astronaut touchdown currently targeted for 2025. SpaceX has also booked several private round-the-moon missions with Starship in the coming years.
Elon Musk’s ultimate goal for SpaceX is to help humanity settle Mars and become a multi-planet species. The company’s ambitious plans for deep-space exploration are a testament to Musk’s vision and the incredible engineering capabilities of SpaceX’s team. With each successful launch, SpaceX brings us one step closer to a future where humanity is no longer confined to a single planet.