Elon Musk and SpaceX's Big Falcon Rocket is a 387-foot-tall Mars launch system. This size-comparison tool shows how big a real-life BFR might be.
By Dave Mosher,Samantha Lee,Olivia Reaney, Business Insider
- Elon Musk's aerospace company, SpaceX, is building a gigantic rocketship to reach Mars.
- The Big Falcon Rocket, or BFR, will use a fully reusable booster and a fully reusable spaceship.
- In SpaceX's "final' design, the two-part launch system stands about 387 feet tall and 30 feet in diameter.
- We created a interactive size comparison tool to show how big a real-life BFR might be.
Elon Musk's rocket company, SpaceX, is working on something big - really big.
The Big Falcon Rocket,
or BFR, is an unprecedented launch system designed to rocket up to 100
people and 150 tons of food, water, and other supplies to the surface
of Mars. The end goal: colonize the red planet and back up the human race.
Musk revealed what he described as the final BFR design in September.
It's made of two giant stages: a fully reusable rocket booster on the
bottom, and a fully reusable spaceship on top. The first crewed mission
is penciled in for 2023 and is expected to blast a Japanese billionaire and a group of artists around the moon.
The illustration below shows the approximate length and shape of each part of the BFR system.
The BFR's dimensions and presumed capabilities are impressive - so
much so that quite a few people in the aerospace industry are puzzled by how it will be done.
They also wonder if it can be built successfully by a private company
on a budget of about $2-10 billion. That's Musk's latest estimate for
how much the development of BFR will cost; the sum is actually a
relative pittance compared to what NASA is paying for its new (and not
reusable) Space Launch System.
To help understand the magnitude of what Musk and his thousands of
employees at SpaceX are trying to accomplish, Business Insider created
an interactive size-comparison graphic.
Next to the rendering of
BFR shown below, you'll see a series of familiar objects at the
rocket's base. (Some are so small that you may have to scroll down a
bit.) Toggle through the 20 comparisons by clicking "next" or "back" to
get a sense of hte rocket's scale.
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