The moon is captured by the rocket tracking camera.
Blue Origin's BE-4 engine is at full power during a hotfire test.
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The Starlink fleet was the only star when the rocket was launched last week.
The operators of the ground-based tracking cameras for the early-morning Falcon 9 rocket launch from Florida were able to see the full moon. The 53 Starlink satellites were launched from Pad 39A of the Kennedy Space Center.
"What you're looking at on your screen is this incredible live shot of the being beincg captured by one of our tracking cameras at the Cape," SpaceX production manager Jessie Anderson said during a live broadcast. "Now, these are the same cameras that we use to track Falcon 9 during launch, and today we're getting a bonus view of the moon, which looks pretty incredible there on your screen." Anderson said the view was captured with the help of a SpaceX launch engineer named John.
Related: SpaceX's Starlink megaconstellation launches in photos
The solar system sights did not stop there.
The Starlink mission was launched at 6:54 a.m. One company photographer captured stunning views of the Falcon 9 with the rising sun.
The morning sun glows with warm yellow-orange light as the Falcon 9 soars as a silhouette. A second photo shows the moment the Falcon 9 crossed in front of the sun.
The Transporter 5 mission will be the next rocket launch by the company. The flight is scheduled for May 25 from Space Launch Complex 40.
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