SpaceX launches and lands rocket



SpaceX sent a Falcon rocket soaring toward orbit Monday night with 11 small satellites, its first mission since an accident last summer. Then in an even more astounding feat, it landed the 15-storey leftover booster back to Earth safely.

It was the first time an unmanned rocket returned to land vertically at Cape Canaveral, Florida, and represented a tremendous success for SpaceX. The company led by billionaire Elon Musk is striving for reusability to drive launch costs down and open up space to more people.

“Welcome back, baby!” Mr Musk tweeted after touchdown.

“It’s a revolutionary moment,” Mr Musk later told reporters. “No one has ever brought a booster, an orbital-class booster, back intact.”

What’s significant is that this was a useful mission, Mr Musk noted, not merely a practice flight. “We achieved recovery of the rocket in a mission that actually deployed 11 satellites,” he said.

SpaceX employees broke into cheers and chants, some of them jumping up and down, following the smooth touchdown nine minutes after lift-off. Previous landing attempts ended in fiery blasts, but those aimed for an ocean platform.

Mr Musk said he ran outside and heard the sonic boom of the returning booster just as it landed; he assumed it had exploded. He learnt the happy truth when he went back into Launch Control and saw video of the standing rocket.

“I can’t quite believe it,” he said. “It’s quite shocking.”

Mr Musk said the landing appeared close to perfect and the company “could not have asked for a better mission or a better day”.

The top officer at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Brig Gen Wayne Monteith, noted that the returning booster “placed the exclamation mark on 2015”.

“This was a first for us at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, and I can’t even begin to describe the excitement the team feels right now having been a part of this historic first-stage rocket landing,” Brig Gen Monteith said.

Across the country, SpaceX employees jammed company headquarters in Hawthorne, California, anxiously awaiting success. They cheered at full throttle when the first stage separated cleanly two minutes into flight and reoriented itself for an unprecedented return to Cape Canaveral. Then the roar became deafening, as TV cameras showed the first-stage booster landing on extended legs at its new, dedicated landing zone. SpaceX commentators called it “incredibly exciting” and were visibly moved by the feat.

“This has been a wildly successful return to flight for SpaceX,” said one SpaceX launch commentator. “We made history today.”

Blue Origin, another billionaire’s rocket company, successfully landed a booster last month in West Texas. That rocket, though, had been used for a suborbital flight. The SpaceX booster was more powerful and flying faster to put satellites into orbit.

The touchdown was a secondary objective for SpaceX. The first was hoisting the satellites for Orbcomm, a New Jersey-based communication company. All 11 were successfully deployed.

Orbcomm chief executive officer Marc Eisenberg seemed just as excited about the booster landing as his satellites reaching orbit.

“Here she comes back,” Eisenberg said via Twitter, sharing a photo of the returning booster. Then: “Bullseye”.

* Associated Press

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Keep it fun and engaging

Stuart Ritchie, director of wealth advice at AES International, says children cannot learn something overnight, so it helps to have a fun routine that keeps them engaged and interested.

“I explain to my daughter that the money I draw from an ATM or the money on my bank card doesn’t just magically appear – it’s money I have earned from my job. I show her how this works by giving her little chores around the house so she can earn pocket money,” says Mr Ritchie.

His daughter is allowed to spend half of her pocket money, while the other half goes into a bank account. When this money hits a certain milestone, Mr Ritchie rewards his daughter with a small lump sum.

He also recommends books that teach the importance of money management for children, such as The Squirrel Manifesto by Ric Edelman and Jean Edelman.