Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

SpaceX sees a payoff from its pioneering work with reusable rockets

Add as a preferred source on Google

When some fellow called Elon Musk pondered the idea all those years ago of launching a rocket, landing it, and flying it again, some folks likely scoffed, while others perhaps choked on their coffee; a few may even have wondered if they should call a doctor.

But then Musk went and did it.

Recommended Videos

Now, Musk’s company, SpaceX, is getting rather good at reusing its rockets, scoring a third successful mission of this kind on Wednesday, October 11. Such a system aims to drastically lower the cost of space travel, allowing for more missions and, in time, more ambitious journeys into deep space.

The private space company launched a Falcon 9 from Kennedy Space Center at just after 6.50 p.m. ET. It marked SpaceX’s 15th launch of 2017, and its 18th landing to date, this latest one on its drone ship floating in the Atlantic Ocean. The perfect touchdown, nine minutes after it left the ground, means SpaceX can now use it for a third time once it’s been refurbished.

The rocket in Wednesday’s mission used a first stage that previously flew in February when it carried supplies to the International Space Station.

SpaceX achieved its first Falcon 9 reflight in March, 2017. Musk described the success as “a huge revolution in space travel,” adding, “It’s the difference between … if you threw away an airplane after every flight versus you could reuse them multiple times.” Musk said the next goal is to cut the reflight time from months to just 24 hours.

With the extraordinary landings still dazzling many of those who follow SpaceX’s trials and tribulations, it can be easy to overlook the actual purpose of these missions. This latest one, for the record, deployed a commercial communications satellite into a geostationary transfer orbit for US-based operator EchoStar and Luxembourg-based SES.

In a busy week for Elon Musk and his team, SpaceX launched another rocket on Monday, October 9 in a mission that took 10 communications satellites into orbit for U.S. firm Iridium.

This year’s successes certainly mark a turnaround for the company following a difficult patch in 2016 when one of its rockets suddenly exploded on the launchpad, forcing SpaceX to put its operations on hold for several months.

Its rockets returned to flight in January this year and continue to serve a range of customers for satellite deployments while also ferrying supplies to the International Space Station.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Think music is the worst hit by slop? AI has deeply polluted podcasts, as well
AI podcasts are turning audio platforms into slop factories
Young woman listening to a podcast

AI slop has already flooded video feeds, gaming debates, software code, and search results. Now the same low-effort machine-made content is moving into podcasts.

Music usually dominates the AI slop debate, but the podcast problem may be harder to spot and harder to clean up. AI tools can now create, upload, and even monetize entire shows far faster than traditional podcast studios.

Read more
AI-fueled health policies are depriving the needy in one of the world’s poorest countries
A flawed AI system is driving up medical costs for Kenya’s poorest families
Two kids in Kenya

Kenya was promising wider access to more affordable healthcare. But a new investigation has revealed that its algorithm-driven system is making life harder for the people it was supposed to help most. According to reporting by The Guardian, Africa Uncensored, and Lighthouse Reports, Kenya's new Social Health Authority system is using a predictive machine-learning algorithm to estimate how much people should pay for public health insurance.

The system was first launched back in October 2024 as part of President William Ruto’s promise to expand healthcare access to Kenya's large informal workforce.

Read more
The legendary Oak Ridge lab just developed a portable device that detects GPS-spoofing live
Thieves can hijack your GPS and make everything look perfectly normal. Scientists just built the fix.
GPS spoofing example image

We trust GPS like we trust gravity. It just works and gets us where we want to go. But what if someone could trick it into lying to you, and you'd have absolutely no idea?

Unlike jamming, which floods your GPS with noise and at least lets you know something is wrong, spoofing sends fake signals that look completely legitimate. You might be tracking your car or a shipment and think everything is alright when actually the shipment has been routed to someplace else, with you none being the wiser. 

Read more