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5 March 2016 - 07:49 AMT

SpaceX launches satellite into orbit, fails to land Falcon 9 in ocean

SpaceX successfully launched a communications satellite to a distant orbit but failed, as expected, to land the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on an ocean platform, AFP said.

The rocket launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida at 6:36 pm (2336 GMT), propelling the satellite, known as SES-9, built by Boeing for the Luxembourg-based company SES.

The satellite successfully reached its geostationary orbit more than 40,000 kilometers above the Earth, about 100 times as high as the International Space Station.

From there it will deliver broadband and television channels to southeast Asia.

"Target altitude of 40,600 kilometers achieved," wrote SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on Twitter.

"Thanks @SES_Satellites for riding on Falcon 9! Look forward to future missions."

After the launch, SpaceX tried to land the first stage of its rocket on a platform floating in the Atlantic Ocean about 600 kilometers off the east coast of Florida.

The droneship, as it is called, is marked with a large "X" and the words, "Of Course I Still Love You."

Grainy video footage showed a bright light approaching the droneship from the upper left, before the live feed cut out, AFP reported.

"Rocket landed hard on the droneship. Didn't expect this one to work," Musk wrote on Twitter.

"But next flight has a good chance."