BFF-01 SpaceX launches secretive Zuma mission

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SpaceX launches secretive Zuma mission

MIAMI, Jan 8, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – SpaceX on Sunday blasted off a secretive US
government payload known as Zuma, a mission whose nature — and the agency
behind it — remains a mystery.

“Three, two, one, ignition and liftoff,” said a SpaceX commentator as the
Falcon 9 rocket launched under cover of darkness from Cape Canaveral,
Florida, at 8:00 pm (0100 GMT Monday).

The launch was initially supposed to take place in November but was
postponed so the California-based company could take a closer look at
potential problems with the fairing, or the nose cone part of the rocket that
protects the payload.

Just what exactly needed such special protection and secrecy is still
unknown.

Northrup Grumman, the maker of the payload, said it was for the US
government and would be delivered to low-Earth orbit, but offered no other
details.

SpaceX and the Pentagon did not respond to requests for comment about the
nature of the mission.

SpaceX has launched national security payloads in the past, including a spy
satellite for the National Reconnaissance Office, and an X-37B space plane
for the US Air Force.

The company’s live webcast did not show video coverage of the Zuma
spacecraft after it separated from the first stage of the rocket, but
confirmed that the fairings deployed and the payload was well on its way to
low-Earth orbit.

After launch, SpaceX returned the tall portion of the Falcon 9 rocket to an
upright landing at Cape Canaveral.

Cheers erupted at SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California as the
rocket glided seamlessly down to ground.

SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk’s goal is to perfect the technique so
that rockets can one day become just as reusable as airplanes, thereby
lowering the cost of space travel .

BSS/AFP/RY/08:05 hrs