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Viewed from above the North pole, earth's rotation is seen to be "anti-clockwise". Given this fact, any rockets launched from the eastern coast of U.S. have more chances of falling back onto inhabited areas to the west of a launch site, (in case of a defective launch / rocket failure) than falling in the "North Atlantic Ocean". I am aware that the rockets forward (towards east) speed is perhaps much faster than the speed at which Earth rotates, however, for theoretical purposes, in case the rocket speed is insufficient, this might happen. So, the question is why did the US choose almost all of their launch sites for non-military rockets, on their eastern coast & not the western coast near California?

Fred
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Niranjan
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Non-polar orbit missions overflying the entirety of the US on every flight (From the West coast, flying eastward) would seem to be a lot more risky, than the extreme example of risk from an East coast launch cited.

Polar launches have simpler flight paths from the West coast, (No need to dodge Cuba, or the Bahamas) vs the East coast. SpaceX has recently demonstrated you can fly polar missions from the East coast, but there is a payload penalty.

geoffc
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Your question is loaded. The premise that the US chose almost all their launch sites for non-military rockets on the eastern coast is patently false.

U.S. Spaceport Launch Sites (source)

The choice of where to launch a rocket is discussed in answers to Briefly, what are the factors to consider when choosing a launch site?.

Wyck
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    The vast majority of those spaceports do not launch into space. The Pacific Spaceport Complex in Alaska, the sites at/near Vandenberg, the sites at/near Cape Canaveral, and the sites at/near Wallops Island are qualified to launch vehicles into space. SpaceX is attempting to have its South Texas site qualified as such. All of those mid continental spaceports do not. – David Hammen Jan 08 '22 at 11:32
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    @DavidHammen: Virgin Galactic has launched to space seven times from Spaceport America and Blue Origin has launched to space nineteen times from Launch Site One aka Corn Ranch, both of which are mid-continental. And SpaceX has launched to space from Kwajalein, which is admittedly not mid-continental, but not near Vandenberg, Cape Canaveral, or Wallops, either, just like the other two. – Jörg W Mittag Jan 08 '22 at 23:03
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    @JörgWMittag Virgin Galactic is not making orbital launches yet, nor is Blue. The risk of accelerating to Mach 25 is a lot more than the much, much lesser speeds that Virgin and Blue use. – David Hammen Jan 09 '22 at 02:49