a screenshot from starship ift3 with visible reentry plasma on the ship
I was losing it when the plasma started. That’s such a legendary shot.
Yup, that was live video of the reentry plasma!
‘Twas epic
Agreed, there were some amazing views. Watching the booster drift off with the curve of Earth in the distance was breathtaking.
where’s a video for that? I saw the launch and this post’s re-entry, but not the booster.
I only watched it live and haven’t watched any replays. I’m not sure but I’d love to see it again. It was a little after booster separation, if you’re looking for it.
awes in 2000 hrs of Elite Dangerous/Odyssey
But irl plasma looks spiffy too.
me whenthe friendship drive is charging:
ELI5 what entry plasma is, and why it’s a big deal? Please, and thanks!
As spacecraft reenter the atmosphere from orbital speeds, they’re going so fast that the atmosphere is compressed enough (and so gets hot enough) to free the electrons from the atoms in the air. This forms plasma. The special thing here is that we got live video during this portion of reentry; the free electrons in plasma heavily interfere with radio communications, so in previous missions there has been a full communications blackout at that time. Starship did not experience that blackout, which is unique. I’m not qualified to say exactly why, but the team was stressing that Starship is big enough that it “punches a hole through the atmosphere”. Another factor could be the 4(?) starlink terminals on the leeward side providing redundant communications signals.
I’m not qualified to say exactly why, but the team was stressing that Starship is big enough that it “punches a hole through the atmosphere”
I think Starship is just wider than most spacecraft which have reentered so far, and so the plasma doesn’t completely surround the vehicle. I think the Space Shuttle also had a small hole in the plasma near the tail, through which communications could be sent. Smaller gumdrop-shaped capsules (like Dragon and Soyuz) are completely enveloped in plasma, and thus experience blackout periods.
pretty sure it’s because starship can communicate with starlink satellites up in orbit, unlike others that have to communicate with ground stations
Wow, that is really cool! Thanks for the explanation <3
Starship has 2 starlink dishes that unlike every others system today communicate back up to orbit to the satellite and then streams the data back down to earth. As long as one dish is pointed towards space (and therefore would have less plasma) communication will still work.
If you’re mind is blown is really should be. Everything about starship seemed near impossible only 5 years ago. No one else in the world is even close.
Thanks!
Burn baby burn! Love how the re-entry test was practically useless, due to the starship spinning like crazy due to random leak on the side.