产品展示
  • 骆驼蓄电池58500适用五菱之光荣光鸿途野马48AH汽车电瓶 以旧换新
  • 比亚迪f3F6速锐前门后门4寸6x96.5寸后备箱同轴喇叭音响套装改装
  • 适用于荣威RX5 ERX5仪表中控台 仪表台空调出风口 冷暖风出风口
  • 大众新老款朗逸朗行朗境宝来空调蒸发箱电机内外循环私服电机原厂
  • 海马2丘比特专用汽车内饰装饰改装配件中控仪表台防晒遮光避光垫
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车电瓶

Sorry, y'all. SpaceX isn't going to Mars in 2018

2024-05-19 16:32:52      点击:657

In April 2016, SpaceX made the bold proclamation that it will send a robotic mission to Mars by 2018.

Today, the Elon Musk-founded company is singing a different tune.

Instead of aiming for the 2018 deadline, SpaceX will now try to launch a robotic mission to Mars -- known as its Red Dragon mission -- two years later, in 2020, SpaceX president Gwynne Shotwell said during a press conference Friday.

SEE ALSO:SpaceX's historic rocket launch Saturday could end in another dramatic landing

This delay will allow the company to refocus on other more, earthly ambitions in the near term before setting its sights on Mars down the road.

"We were focused on 2018, but we felt like we needed to put more resources and focus more heavily on our crew program and our Falcon Heavy program, so we’re looking more in the 2020 time frame for that," Shotwell said.

Mashable ImageArtist's illustration of a Mars landing.Credit: spacex

The 2020 mission should involve sending a Dragon spacecraft to Mars using the company's Falcon Heavy rocket -- the largest launcher SpaceX has ever built, designed for heavy payloads and distant parts of the solar system.

SpaceX has yet to launch a test flight of the Falcon Heavy, but Shotwell is confident the rocket should fly on its first mission by this summer.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

Musk has also expressed his grand plan to launch a crewed mission to the red planet by around 2024, with a city on Mars coming sometime after that, perhaps in the 2060s, though those plans are still very much up in the air.

Once the Red Dragon mission takes flight, it will be exciting. According to Shotwell, SpaceX will carry science experiments and other payloads to the Martian surface with it.

SpaceX's move to refocus also makes sense in light of the difficulties SpaceX has faced in the past couple years.

Mashable ImageArtist's illustration of SpaceX's Dragon on Mars.Credit: spacex

In June 2015, a Falcon 9 rocket exploded after launching toward the International Space Station from Florida, and in September 2016, another Falcon 9 exploded during a test before launch.

While SpaceX has weathered those failures (and according to Shotwell, they could weather another if it had to), it has caused some industry experts to question whether the company is up to their ambitious tasks.

The independent U.S. Government Accountability Office recently reviewed SpaceX's progress toward launching NASA astronauts to the International Space Station aboard crewed Dragon capsules and found that the company will not meet their original 2017 crew launch date.

Boeing, the other company under contract with NASA for these types of launches, will also miss that original deadline.

The office found that those human launches could slip until 2019, though Shotwell said SpaceX will meet its 2018 goal.


Featured Video For You
Fiery explosion sets back SpaceX and Facebook

新年伊始,四会兰花“焕新”广州白云国际机场
Kendrick Lamar vs. Drake rap beef is big business for content creators