A Spacex Falcon 9 rocket launched 29 Starlink satellites early on March 4, 2026, creating a luminous plume that spread across the Florida sky like a giant jellyfish. The unusual display appeared because the rocket’s exhaust was illuminated by sunlight high above the still-dark horizon.
The launch took place at 5:52 a.m. ET from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. While the mission’s objective was routine, delivering new satellites to orbit, the timing transformed it into a visual spectacle observed by early risers along the Space Coast.
The flight also marked another step in the rapid expansion of SpaceX’s Starlink constellation and added a new milestone for one of the company’s frequently reused rocket boosters.
A Sunrise Effect that Creates A “Space Jellyfish”
The glowing formation appeared shortly after liftoff, as the rocket climbed through the upper atmosphere. According to Space.com, the phenomenon occurs when sunlight illuminates the exhaust plume from the rocket’s upper stage while the sky below remains dark.
The expanding gases, mainly water vapor and carbon dioxide, spread into a large cloud that reflects sunlight in blue and orange tones. From the ground, the bright core and trailing shapes give the appearance of a floating jellyfish drifting through the sky.
Launches around dawn or dusk often produce this effect because the rocket quickly reaches altitudes where sunlight is already present, even though observers on the ground are still in darkness.
Falcon 9 launches 29 @Starlink satellites from Florida pic.twitter.com/GMLUDFBTao
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) March 4, 2026
29 Satellites Delivered to Low Earth Orbit
The mission carried 29 Starlink satellites, identified as part of Group 10-40, into low Earth orbit. According to the source, the deployment continues the rapid growth of Spacex’s satellite internet constellation, which is approaching 10,000 spacecraft in orbit.
Starlink launches now dominate the company’s activity. The March 4 flight represented SpaceX’s 28th mission of 2026, and 23 of those launches have been dedicated to building the Starlink network, the same source reports.
The constellation forms a global network designed to provide broadband internet coverage using thousands of satellites operating in coordinated orbital planes.
Booster B1080 Completes Its 25th Mission
The rocket’s first stage, Booster B1080, flew for the 25th time during this launch. After separating from the upper stage, it returned safely to Earth and landed on the droneship “A Shortfall of Gravitas” positioned in the Atlantic Ocean off the Florida coast.
SpaceX mission records, reported by Space.com, show that the landing marked the company’s 580th successful booster recovery achieved by the company. Reusing first stages has become a defining feature of the Falcon 9 program.
Booster B1080 has previously supported several major missions, including Ax-2, Euclid, Ax-3, CRS-30, SES Astra 1P and multiple Starlink launches, evidence of how frequently the same hardware now returns to space.