SpaceXs newest rocket landing on a drone ship was so smooth that if you blink while watching the video, you might miss the touchdown.SpaceX published the five-second clip on Twitter on June 21. In the video, a Falcon 9 rockets first stage successfully kisses the deck of the Just Read the Instructions drone ship on June 17, off the coast of eastern Florida. Minutes in the past, the rocket successfully increased the GPS III SV05 navigation satellite to orbit, for the businesss 19th launch of the year from the Space Coast.If the video zipped by a little quick for you, SpaceX also launched some high-definition still shots on Twitter showing the rockets very first stage– orange flame glaring below– hovering and landing aboard the drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean.Related: SpaceXs Crew-2 launch illuminate the predawn sky with an amazing show (photos) Image 1 of 4A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket comes in for a stunning landing on a drone ship after introducing the GPS III SV05 satellite for the U.S. Space Force on June 17, 2021. (Image credit: SpaceX) Image 2 of 4A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket comes in for a sensational landing on a drone ship after introducing the GPS III SV05 satellite for the U.S. Space Force on June 17, 2021. (Image credit: SpaceX) Image 3 of 4A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket comes in for a sensational landing on a drone ship after launching the GPS III SV05 satellite for the U.S. Space Force on June 17, 2021. (Image credit: SpaceX) Image 4 of 4The SpaceX Falcon 9 booster seen in Port Canaveral after returning house to Cape Canaveral, Florida after its June 17, 2021 launch and landing. (Image credit: SpaceX) SpaceX likewise posted more views of the mission drawn from orbit, showing the Falcon 9s 2nd phase Merlin engine, backdropped by Earth, and from the launch location at the recently renamed Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, showing the Falcon 9 skyrocketing high in the seconds after liftoff.A view of Earth as seen from the GPS III SV05 objective in orbit on June 17, 2021. (Image credit: SpaceX) The GPS III SV05 satellite objective is the 2nd SpaceX mission so far in June, following the launch of a broadband satellite for Sirius XM on June 6. It likewise was the 4th GPS satellite shipment by SpaceX for the U.S. military, after three previous GPS III objectives likewise released on Falcon 9 rockets. (Another GPS III satellite released in August 2019 on United Launch Alliances last flight of the Delta IV Medium rocket.) This generation of upgraded GPS satellites consists of more robust anti-jamming capabilities and more precise signals to eventually change the abilities of the navigational satellites that are aging in orbit after releasing two decades back, according to maker Lockheed Martin.SpaceXs next launch from the Space Coast is set up for Tuesday (June 29) throughout an hour-long window that opens at 2:56 p.m. EDT (1856 GMT). The operation will see a Falcon 9 rocket loft the Transporter 2 rideshare objective. SpaceXs next crewed launch is the all-civilian Inspiration4 objective, which will introduce from the very same place in September.Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook..