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SpaceX rocket lit up New Zealand’s sky with a crazy blue spiral (photo)

A New Zealand resident spotted a “bizarre but very cool” blue spiral above her house following a SpaceX launch on Sunday (June 19). Clare Rehill photographed the spiral in the sky above Queenstown, a town on New Zealand’s South Island. She posted (opens in new tab) the photo on Twitter⁠ early in the morning her time on Monday (June 20), speculating that “it’s got something to do with SpaceX .

” Her instincts were good. The sky show came courtesy of a two-stage SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, which launched from Florida’s Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Sunday at 12:27 a. m.

EDT (0427 GMT), carrying a communications satellite for the Louisiana-based company Globalstar to orbit. The spiral was generated by the Falcon 9’s upper stage, and Rehill was not the only one to capture its activities on camera. Related: SpaceX’s Starlink megaconstellation launches in photos Jarred Wood of Illinois took this video (opens in new tab) during the satellite’s orbital insertion, showing a “smoke ring” over the Prairie State.

(He shared it with Spaceweather. com (opens in new tab) , which gave permission to host it here at Space. com.

) “The smoke ring Wood saw was the ‘puff’ of separation,” the website’s astronomer Tony Phillips wrote (opens in new tab) . “At the time, the rocket was more than 1100 km [680 miles] high, so people were able to see it across much of North America. ” As for the spiral seen in New Zealand, the galaxy-shaped feature was due to the upper stage of the Falcon 9 venting leftover fuel as it fell naturally into the Pacific Ocean.

(Unlike the Falcon 9 first stage, which lands after launch for refurbishment and reflight, the rocket’s upper stage is expendable. ) “The upper stage was probably spinning on its longest axis to stabilize flight orientation, hence the spiral shape,” Spaceweather. com wrote (opens in new tab) .

“Similar spirals have been seen after previous Falcon 9 launches. ” @Alasdair_Burns saw this beautiful rocket exhaust spiral in the sky over Stewart Island this evening #space #SpaceX #NewZealand pic. twitter.

com/Gv2XpcK3Ii June 19, 2022 SpaceX launches have produced other pretty patterns in the sky as well. In May, for example, a Falcon 9 launch of SpaceX Starlink internet satellites produced a “space jellyfish” in the predawn sky over Florida’s Space Coast. This phenomenon happened because the gas in the rocket’s engine nozzles was at a higher pressure than the surrounding air; the rising sun, just below the horizon, then illuminated the plume, Chris Combs, a professor of aerodynamics and mechanical engineering at the University of Texas at San Antonio, explained on Twitter (opens in new tab) .

SpaceX’s Globalstar launch was the third in about 36 hours for the company. The company launched 53 Starlink satellites on Friday (June 17) from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida and a radar satellite for the German military from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Saturday (June 18). Editor’s note: If you captured a stunning view of the SpaceX launch and want to share it for an image gallery or story, let us know! You can send images and comments in to spacephotos@space.

com . Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace (opens in new tab) . Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook.

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From: space
URL: https://www.space.com/spacex-rocket-launch-blue-spiral-photo/

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