Level 1 - Absolute Beginner
SpaceX launched a very big rocket called Starship on May 22, 2026. It was the 12th test flight. Something went wrong with part of the rocket.
The bottom part of the rocket is called Super Heavy. It should have landed safely. But it fell too fast and crashed into the sea.
The government agency FAA said the flight was a mishap. The FAA told SpaceX to stop flying Starship until they find out what went wrong.
- rocket
- a vehicle that can travel into space using powerful engines
- test flight
- a trial flight to check if a vehicle works correctly
- launch
- to send a rocket into the air or into space
- crash
- to hit something with great force and be destroyed
- mishap
- an accident or something that goes wrong
- FAA
- the Federal Aviation Administration - the U.S. government agency that controls air and space travel
- investigation
- a careful examination to find out the facts about something
- booster
- the lower part of a rocket that gives it the power to lift off
Level 2 - Elementary
SpaceX launched its powerful Starship V3 rocket on May 22, 2026, in the twelfth test flight of the Starship program. The flight was also the first to use the new Block 3 design and the first to launch from Starbase's second launch pad.
During the mission, the Super Heavy booster experienced serious problems. After separating from the upper stage, the booster flipped in an unusual direction. Most of the booster's engines then failed, and only one engine worked during the landing attempt. The booster crashed into the Gulf of Mexico at a speed of 1,450 km/h, much faster than planned.
The Starship upper stage performed better. Although one of its six engines shut down early, the ship completed a controlled splashdown in the Indian Ocean as planned. On May 27, the Federal Aviation Administration declared the flight a mishap and grounded the entire Starship program until SpaceX completes a full investigation.
- program
- a planned series of related events or operations
- Block 3
- the third major design version of the Starship rocket system
- stage separation
- the moment when the lower booster section disconnects from the upper rocket stage
- landing attempt
- a try at bringing a spacecraft back to the ground safely
- controlled splashdown
- a planned landing of a spacecraft in water at a safe, low speed
- grounded
- prevented from flying; ordered to stop operating
- Federal Aviation Administration
- the U.S. government agency responsible for regulating aviation and commercial space launches
- engine
- a machine that converts fuel into motion or power
Level 3 - Intermediate
SpaceX's Starship V3 Flight 12, which launched from Starbase's newly commissioned Pad 2 on May 22, 2026, ended in a partial failure when the Super Heavy booster experienced a catastrophic sequence of failures after stage separation. Following an abnormal rapid flip, most of the booster's engines shut down, and only a single engine fired during the terminal landing burn, causing the vehicle to impact the Gulf of Mexico at approximately 1,450 km/h rather than completing the planned return to the launch site.
The Starship upper stage performed in a contingency mode after one of its six Raptor engines shut down 36 seconds into the flight, adjusting its trajectory to build sufficient velocity before main engine cutoff. Despite the modified flight profile, the ship successfully completed a planned Indian Ocean splashdown. The mission also deployed 22 Starlink simulator payloads using a newly designed dispenser mechanism.
The Federal Aviation Administration designated the booster mishap as a reportable safety incident on May 27, formally grounding the Starship program pending a root-cause investigation. The grounding adds uncertainty to SpaceX's return-to-flight timeline as the company prepares for its anticipated June Nasdaq IPO, whose prospectus cites Starship's operational progress as a key milestone for the company's future revenue projections.
- catastrophic
- involving a sudden great disaster or failure with severe consequences
- stage separation
- the moment when the lower booster stage disconnects from the upper stage of a rocket
- terminal landing burn
- the final engine firing performed just before a rocket booster touches down
- contingency mode
- a backup operating plan used when the primary mission profile cannot be followed
- root-cause investigation
- a formal examination to identify the underlying reason for a failure
- anomaly
- something that deviates from what is standard or expected, often used for technical failures
- return-to-flight
- the process of being cleared to resume launches after a grounding
- milestone
- an important event or achievement that marks progress toward a goal
Level 4 - Advanced
SpaceX's Starship V3 Block 3 inaugural flight on May 22, 2026 from Starbase's new Pad 2 produced a split verdict: the Ship stage demonstrated sufficient resilience to complete a planned Indian Ocean splashdown via a contingency trajectory after losing one of its six Raptor engines at T+36 seconds, while the Super Heavy booster suffered a sequential failure cascade following stage separation, including an anomalous rapid-flip attitude excursion, progressive multi-engine loss, and a single-engine terminal descent that impacted the Gulf of Mexico at approximately 1,450 km/h. The FAA's declaration of a mishap on May 27 and the consequent Starship grounding initiate a formal root-cause investigation under 14 CFR Part 460, which governs U.S. commercial human spaceflight operations.
The booster failure mode is particularly consequential for SpaceX's operational cadence. The planned return-to-launch-site catch maneuver, a keystone of Starship's rapid-reusability business model, failed to execute, raising questions about whether the attitude-control software managing the post-separation flip maneuver has been adequately validated across the expanded aerodynamic envelope of the Block 3 vehicle's enlarged upper-stage fairing. Analysis of telemetry data suggests the anomaly sequence initiated within milliseconds of the expected flip command window, pointing toward a guidance, navigation and control software boundary condition rather than a hardware propulsion deficiency.
Commercially, the timing amplifies risk for SpaceX's anticipated June Nasdaq IPO, whose S-1 prospectus reportedly cites Starship's progressive operational maturation, including booster reusability and high launch cadence, as foundational assumptions for the company's longer-term revenue model projecting $100 billion in annual Starlink and government launch revenue by 2030. An extended grounding ahead of the IPO roadshow could prompt analysts to discount projections, though SpaceX's legal team is expected to cite the established precedent that FAA mishap investigations under nominal Part 460 procedures typically conclude within 90 days.
- failure cascade
- a sequence in which one failure triggers a series of subsequent failures throughout a system
- attitude excursion
- an unplanned deviation of a spacecraft from its intended orientation or pointing direction
- return-to-launch-site
- a landing maneuver in which a rocket booster flies back to its original launch pad
- rapid-reusability
- the capability of a rocket to be relaunched with minimal refurbishment time between flights
- aerodynamic envelope
- the range of speeds, altitudes, and attitudes within which an aircraft or rocket can safely operate
- guidance, navigation and control
- the systems that steer a spacecraft and maintain its intended trajectory and orientation