SpaceX on Flickr Thursday's launch was postponed. Learn more here.

SpaceX was scheduled to launch an 11,750-pound satellite into space on Wednesday, but dodgy weather got in the way.

The next launch attempt is scheduled for Thursday evening.

The launch window — a carefully calibrated time when the rocket can safely launch into space — will open at 6:46 p.m. and last through 8:23 p.m. ET.

SpaceX's main mission on Thursday will be to transport the SES-9 communications satellite into orbit over Asia, but the more dramatic, secondary goal will be what happens about 10 minutes after lift-off.

That's when the main, first stage of the Falcon 9 will fly itself back to Earth and attempt to land on a floating ocean platform called "Of Course I Still Love You." (In case you were wondering, the text is in honor of a starship in sci-fi author Iain M. Banks' "The Player of Games.")

While SpaceX will attempt one of it's gutsy rocket landings after the launch, the company stated that it doesn't expect a high probability of success for this landing attempt. Still, practice makes perfect, and a failed attempt is better than not trying, at all. Plus, SpaceX engineers stand to learn from the attempt if something goes amiss.

SpaceX will be broadcasting the event live via LiveStream, provided here. Read on to learn why landing on an ocean platform is so important.

Not all missions are created equal

Wednesday's rocket landing attempt will be SpaceX's fourth try at touching a rocket down on an ocean platform. Check out some of its earlier attempts below:

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If the landing sticks — which would completely exceed SpaceX's expectations — it will be the first time the company will have successfully landed one of its first stage Falcon 9 rockets on a floating platform.

While SpaceX has already proven it can land its rockets — a feat the company achieved for the first time at its Landing Zone 1 site at Cape Canaveral last December — landing on a floating platform in the ocean is technically more challenging than touching down on land, like December's achievement.

That's because not every mission to space is the same:

Some missions transport cargo into higher orbits above Earth's surface than others. The higher the orbit, the faster the rocket has to travel, and the more fuel it costs the rocket after take-off.

Appropriately, the missions with the highest orbits are called high velocity missions.

Because they use more fuel after take-off, that also means means less fuel for a reusable rocket's trip back to Earth. Ocean platforms offer a closer landing site for these high velocity missions that cost more fuel.

If SpaceX can land its first stage Falcon 9 on ocean platforms, it will prove that the company can readily retrieve rockets from the most difficult, fuel-exhausting missions — the high velocity missions. And if it can retrieve rockets from the most difficult missions, then it can retrieve rockets from any future space mission.

Ultimately, the idea behind these rocket landings — whether on land or drone ship — is to eventually make rockets reusable, like airplanes. This could drastically reduce the cost of spaceflight by up to a factor of 100 and get SpaceX, along with the rest of humanity, on track for a new era — one that's potentially moving toward becoming a multiplanetary species.