 SpaceX's next-generation spacecraft Starship, developed to carry astronauts to the moon and beyond launched on November 18, from South Texas, seven months after its first attempt to reach ended with an explosion. The two-stage rocket ship, taller than the Statue of Liberty, blasted off from the Elon Muscon company's starbase launch site near Boca Chica in Texas, east of Brownsville, on a planned 90-minute uncrewed flight into space. The launch marked only the second attempt to fly Starship mounted atop its towering super-heavy rocket booster. A live SpaceX webcast of the lift-off showed the rocket ship rising from the launch tower into the morning sky as the super-heavy's cluster of powerful Raptor engines thundered to life in a ball of flame and billowing clouds of exhaust and water vapor. The test flight's principal objective was to get Starship off the ground and into space just shy of EarthObit. That callout tells us Starship is through the period of greatest stress on the way to space. And our position of signal Houston and New Orleans booster engine cutoff. Stage separation. You can see the super-heavy booster has just experienced a rapid, unscheduled disassembly. However,