Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. News

The scenery steals the show in this epic SpaceX rocket landing

Enjoy the ride!

Add as a preferred source on Google
SpaceX Falcon 9 booster on its way home.
Screenshot SpaceX

Well, those Falcon 9 landings never get old. Imagine, just over a decade ago the idea of being able to land a rocket upright after it’d been to space seemed crazy. And then SpaceX went and did it.

Following its first successful touchdown in December 2015, SpaceX suffered the occasional mishap with its booster landings, but in recent years it’s well and truly nailed the process.

Recommended Videos

The Elon Musk-led spaceflight company shared a video (below) this week of its most recent landing, with dramatic footage captured by a camera attached to the rocket showing the spectacular early-morning ride home.

That was a super pretty return for Falcon 9 B1093-11 (now 12). pic.twitter.com/HlGkTijw2o

— NSF – NASASpaceflight.com (@NASASpaceflight) February 25, 2026

The Falcon 9’s mission started from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, and involved the launch of 25 Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit.

This was the 11th flight for the first-stage booster (B1093) supporting this mission, which previously launched SDA T1TL-B, SDA T1TL-C, and now nine Starlink missions.

As the video shows, after deploying the upper stage, the 41.2 meter-tall (about 135 feet) booster returned to Earth minutes later, landing on the Of Course I Still Love You droneship waiting in the Pacific Ocean.

To achieve an autonomous landing like this, a Falcon 9 booster begins by performing a flip using cold gas thrusters after stage separation, sometimes followed by a boostback burn. As it descends, the booster deploys its grid fins to steer through the atmosphere before performing an entry burn to slow down. Finally, it executes a landing burn while deploying its legs for a stable touchdown.

The landings allow SpaceX to reuse its boosters multiple times, reducing the cost of spaceflight and opening access to more companies and organizations.

Just last weekend, another Falcon 9 booster set a new reuse record of 33 flights after launching for the first time in June 2021.

SpaceX has applied what it’s learned from the landings to its much bigger and more powerful Starship rocket, which is expected to take its 12th test flight in March.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
China’s answer to SpaceX’s reusable rockets literally catches boosters in a net
SpaceX catches boosters on legs. China just used a net.
Ammunition, Missile, Weapon

SpaceX's playbook for recovering a rocket booster generally involves legs, a precisely controlled vertical landing, and either a concrete pad or a drone ship. 

China just managed to pull off something similar, but in a slightly different way, and on July 10, it tested the method as well.

Read more
Dimming the sun sounds unhinged, but this new study on El Niño makes a surprisingly good case for it
A natural test case, Australia's worst-ever wildfire season, suggests the idea deserves serious consideration.
Nature, Outdoors, Sky

When I first saw "scientists propose dimming the sun," I rolled my eyes. It sounds like a science fiction movie cooked up after watching many climate documentaries. But a new study, published on July 8, 2026, in the journal Science Advances, seems to have a genuinely compelling argument.

A Super El Niño is currently forming in the Pacific, feared to be the most intense in decades. It could escalate floods, wildfires, and extreme heat events worldwide. However, Researchers at UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, led by climate scientists Kate Ricke and Jessica Wan, are now proposing one of the most interesting solutions I’ve come across.

Read more
You can now walk through space and gaze into a black hole at this VR exhibit
Smithsonian Starstruck lets you drift past dying stars and see the origin point of the universe for as little as $18 a person.
Smithsonian Starstruck featured

Most planetarium shows ask you to sit still and look up. The Smithsonian's new VR exhibit takes a different approach, letting visitors walk through the vast expanse of the universe, drifting past stars, planets, and a black hole to get a physical sense of its true scale.

A $29 ticket to the edge of the galaxy

Read more