This content originally appeared on Bram.us and was authored by Bramus!
Earlier this week SpaceX’s SN10 rocket took off, ascended to ±10km, and then after a free fall in the horizontal position turned vertical again to successfully land (only to explode a few minutes later).
While you can rewatch the whole thing online I’m fascinated by this composite photo by Jack Beyer, visualizing the trajectory:
This is a composite image of SN10's launch and landing. I set this camera to shoot one frame a second, threw out any overlapping shots and stacked them all so we can see the trajectory better. @NASASpaceflight
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— Jack Beyer (@thejackbeyer) March 4, 2021
Cool! ?
This content originally appeared on Bram.us and was authored by Bramus!
Bramus! | Sciencx (2021-03-06T23:36:55+00:00) SpaceX’s SN10 “Belly Flop” Composite. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2021/03/06/spacexs-sn10-belly-flop-composite/
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