KEY POINTS
  • SpaceX's latest Starship prototype landed for the first time after a high-altitude flight test but then exploded a few minutes after as it stood on the concrete pad.
  • The cause of the explosion, or whether it was intentional, was not immediately clear.
  • The company test flew Starship rocket Serial Number 10, or SN10, on a flight to about 32,800 feet altitude before returning to land on a concrete pad a few minutes later.
Starship prototype SN10 returns for a soft landing on a concrete pad at the company's facility in Boca Chica, Texas.

SpaceX's Starship prototype exploded shortly after landing for the first time following a high-altitude flight test on Wednesday.

The cause of the explosion, or whether it was intentional, was not immediately clear. Elon Musk alternatively refers to explosions as "RUDs," or Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly.