SpaceX Falcon 9 launch paints glowing ‘jellyfish’ across Western US skies (photos, video)

Parts of the Western United States were treated to a cosmic spectacle Sunday evening, as a giant streak illuminated the skies from Los Angeles to Phoenix.

Minutes after SpaceX’s Sept. 28 Starlink launch lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Station (VSFS), in California, the Falcon 9 rocket supporting the mission reached the upper atmosphere to create a phenomenon often referred to as a “jellyfish” effect.

Falcon 9 launched at 11:04 p.m. EDT (7:04 p.m. local PDT; 0204 GMT, Sept. 29). The rocket carried 28 new Starlink satellites to join SpaceX’s growing wireless internet megaconstellation of over 8,000 networked spacecraft. The dusk liftoff provided ideal conditions for the setting sun to illuminate Falcon 9’s expanding engine exhaust against the darkening sky, as onlookers for hundreds of miles gazed in amazement.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket rises after launching from Vandenberg Space Force Base carrying 28 Starlink internet satellites on September 28, 2025, as seen from Altadena, California.  (Image credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images)

The density of Earth’s upper atmosphere causes the exhaust plume of a rocket’s engines to expand as it ascends. The launch site at Vandenberg Space Force Base is notorious for its overcast and extremely foggy conditions, but Sunday’s clear skies created the ideal conditions for Falcon 9’s jellyfish to emerge.


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