THE test launch of most powerful rocket ever built has been postponed, leaving hundreds of thousands excited onlookers disappointed.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX, the company behind the rocket, said there was a pressurisation issue and so they will push ahead with a wet dress rehearsal instead.

Starship getting ready for launch at Starbase, in Texas, the US

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Starship getting ready for launch at Starbase, in Texas, the USCredit: SpaceX
The Starship is designed to transport up to 100 people from Earth to the Moon and Mars

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The Starship is designed to transport up to 100 people from Earth to the Moon and MarsCredit: SpaceX

Around 250,000 people tuned into Nasa’s livestream of the test launch, before it was suddenly cancelled.

It’s not all bad news for the SpaceX team, however.

The company are now treating today as Starship’s first wet dress rehearsal, which simulates every stage of a rocket launch without the vehicle actually leaving the pad.

The $3billion mega-rocket Starship, built by Elon Musk’s SpaceX company, has been designed as the vehicle to take humans interplanetary.

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The 33-engine, nearly 400-feet tall, rocket is the eccentric billionaire’s biggest feat yet.

The vehicle is about a year old, but SpaceX has big plans for the rocket.

It is expected to take humans to the Moon through Nasa’s Artemis mission in 2025, and eventually to Mars sometime in the 2030s.

“It’s the first launch of a very complicated, gigantic rocket, so it might not launch. We’re going to be very careful, and if we see anything that gives us concern, we will postpone the launch,” Musk told a Twitter Spaces event.

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“If we do launch, I would consider anything that does not result in the destruction of the launch pad itself to be a win.”

Musk had already expressed doubt with the test launch’s success, saying Starship has a 50% chance of reaching orbit at the Morgan Stanley 2023 Technology, Media and Telecommunications conference last month.

“This is a very difficult programme,” Musk said at the time, adding that “the rocket is roughly two-and-a-half times the thrust of the Saturn V, so if or when it reaches orbit it’ll be by far the largest rocket to reach orbit.

“The key to expanding life beyond Earth is a fully and rapidly reusable orbital rocket.

“This is a very hard problem given the constraints… Earth has a thick atmosphere and strong gravity, it is only barely possible to do this, that is why it has not been done before.”

Musk said there was “hopefully above a 50 per cent chance” of reaching orbit, acknowledging there was a significant chance the test launch will end in a fiery explosion.

The debut orbital launch of the next-generation spacecraft was set to take place at the company’s Starbase facility in Texas.

The Starship is designed to transport up to 100 people from Earth to the Moon and Mars, so will eventually have its interior kitted out to suit humans on months-long space voyages.

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This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk

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