Tomorrow, SpaceX will change history with the mission of releasing Falcon 9 missiles

Billionaire Elon Musk and SpaceX will conduct an extremely important mission tomorrow, March 30th. It is releasing a used Falcon 9 rocket, this is the first time in human history there is a Space rockets are reused and launched back into space.

SpaceX's mission will open up a new revolution in the aerospace industry, helping to reduce the cost of traveling to space significantly. All of SpaceX's previous tests were just landing Falcon 9 missiles, which would be the first time a Falcon 9 missile was launched again.

According to the plan, if all goes well, SpaceX will re-launch Falcon 9 missiles that were tested on April 8, 2016. The rocket has made a mission to put a satellite into orbit. Earth and landed back on unmanned barges in the Atlantic Ocean.

Although the majority of these Falcon 9 missiles have split and fallen into the sea during launch (these parts sink into the ocean and are not reused), however the most important part of the name The fire remains and is restored.

Picture 1 of Tomorrow, SpaceX will change history with the mission of releasing Falcon 9 missiles
The most important part of the rocket still remains and is restored.

This is also the most expensive component of a Falcon 9 rocket , so the reuse of rockets will help cut costs significantly. According to calculations, companies that want to put satellites on Earth orbit can save about $ 18 million each launch using rocket reuse (a Falcon 9 missile costs $ 62 million).

This mission is what SpaceX still cherishes, in order to prove to the world that the idea of ​​re-using rockets can become a reality. Before SpaceX, NASA also tested many space rocket projects and re-used shuttles.

Picture 2 of Tomorrow, SpaceX will change history with the mission of releasing Falcon 9 missiles
Falcon 9 missiles will use up to 9 rocket engines to fly into Earth orbit.

Falcon 9 missiles will use up to nine rocket engines to be able to fly into Earth orbit. The rocket engines of the first stage will separate when the rocket reaches the desired height. Later modules such as satellites will be separated and moved into earth orbit.

The rest of the mission will be to bring the Falcon 9 missile back to Earth. A rocket engine will be used in this second phase, with the task of reducing the rate of free fall and stabilizing rockets when landing.

We will be waiting to see if SpaceX can set a historic change tomorrow.