Autor Wątek: Falcon 9 | Transporter-7 | 15.04.2023  (Przeczytany 1592 razy)

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Offline Lion97

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Falcon 9 | Transporter-7 | 15.04.2023
« dnia: Kwiecień 06, 2023, 23:46 »
Nmer misji   #227   
Data   15 kwietnia 2023, 08:47:49 czasu polskiego
Okno startowe   natychmiastowe
Materiały prasowe    Transporter-7 Press Kit
Miejsce startu   VSFB SLC-4E 
Miejsce lądowania   Landing Zone 4
Rakieta   Falcon 9 Block 5
Booster   1063.10
Ładunek   kilkadziesiąt małych satelitów
Docelowa orbita   SSO (polarna, LEO)
Klient   Exolaunch, Momentus, D-Orbit, inni

Siódma dedykowana misja prowadzonego przez SpaceX programu wynoszenia na orbitę małych satelitów, SmallSat Rideshare. Na orbitę heliosynchronizną wyniesione zostało kilkadziesiąt mikrosatelitów oraz cubesatów. Część satelitów była zakontraktowana przez pośredników – firmy Exolaunch, Momentus oraz D-Orbit, część natomiast bezpośrednio przez SpaceX.

Podczas tego lotu po raz pierwszy została wykorzystana nowa wersja dyszy silnika MVac w drugim stopniu rakiety, której celem jest zmniejszenie kosztów, ułatwienie produkcji i w efekcie zwiększenie częstotliwości lotów. Nowa dysza jest krótsza w porównaniu do poprzedniej wersji, w związku z czym impuls właściwy i wydajność rakiety są niższe. Oznacza to, że będzie ona wykorzystywana wyłącznie podczas misji, które nie wymagają pełnej wydajności rakiety.


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« Ostatnia zmiana: Kwiecień 17, 2023, 21:20 wysłana przez Lion97 »

Offline pogrzex

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Odp: Falcon 9 | Transporter-7 | 11.04.2023
« Odpowiedź #1 dnia: Kwiecień 08, 2023, 10:54 »
Kolega z pracy będzie podczas startu w rejonie około 250km na wschód od Los Angeles. Wysłać mu info żeby wypatrywał odpalenia drugiego stopnia, czy z tej odległości nic nie będzie widać?
'pierd.... Aphopis czy inny dziad i wała bedzieta mieli ze swoich grubych portfeli'

Offline Lion97

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Odp: Falcon 9 | Transporter-7 | 11.04.2023
« Odpowiedź #2 dnia: Kwiecień 08, 2023, 15:30 »
Kolega z pracy będzie podczas startu w rejonie około 250km na wschód od Los Angeles. Wysłać mu info żeby wypatrywał odpalenia drugiego stopnia, czy z tej odległości nic nie będzie widać?

Drugi stopień raczej słabo widać, ale profil tej misji powinien sprzyjać takiej obserwacji. Start w nocy, Falcon 9 będzie leciał na południe i pierwszy stopień wraca do miejsca startu, wiec separacja stopni jest ok. 14 sekund wcześniej w porównaniu do innych misji. Poniżej trajektoria lotu:

https://twitter.com/Raul74Cz/status/1645416658343788544
« Ostatnia zmiana: Kwiecień 10, 2023, 18:07 wysłana przez Lion97 »

Offline Lion97

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Odp: Falcon 9 | Transporter-7 | 15.04.2023
« Odpowiedź #3 dnia: Kwiecień 15, 2023, 09:24 »
Falcon 9 wystartował, wylądował na LZ-4 i jak widać silnik MVAC ma krótsza dysze. SpaceX wyjaśnił, że w przypadku tej misji pierwszy stopień Entry Burn wykona tylko z jednym silnikiem, a podczas lądowania zostaną odpalone trzy silniki. Podobny profil do lądowania używają boczne Boostery Falcona Heavy.
 
https://twitter.com/SpaceX/status/1647130493723496448

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Odp: Falcon 9 | Transporter-7 | 15.04.2023
« Odpowiedź #3 dnia: Kwiecień 15, 2023, 09:24 »

Offline Orionid

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Odp: Falcon 9 | Transporter-7 | 15.04.2023
« Odpowiedź #4 dnia: Kwiecień 26, 2023, 00:13 »
Masa ładunków wynosiła ok. 22,800 kg.
Wiele satelitów na pokładzie i jak ostatnio w przypadku misji "T" pojawia się pewien obszar niepewności.
Np. Cubesat 'It's About Time':  nie wiadomo czy jest 3U czy 6U.

https://twitter.com/planet4589/status/1647385378972737537
Jeden satelita występuje pod ukrytą postacią undisclosed.
AS I SFN tylko fragmentarycznie podchodzą do opisu ładunków.
Gunter jeszcze ma braki w opisie wszystkich satelitów.
Wg aktualnych danych misja zawierała 51 ładunków (satelity, dyspensery, ładunki zintegrowane z 2. stopniem lub dyspenserami)

Poniższa lista na LK jest już w jakimś stopniu nieaktualna.
(na stronie http://lk.astronautilus.pl/starty23.htm żaden ze składników tego startu nawet się nie pojawił).


Kolejny hurtowy start SpaceX
  15.04. o 06:48:00,118 z Vandenberg wystrzelona została RN Falcon-9R, która wyniosła w T_57' 50" na orbitę szereg satelitów w ramach misji Transporter-7. Były to:
Alba Cluster 7 (Istanbul, MRC-100, ROM-2),
BRO-9,
Brokkr-1,
Bronco Space,
CACI Demosat,
CIRBE (ELaNa 47),
Connecta T2.1,
D-Orbit ION [Kepler (x2)],
DEWA SAT-2?,
FACSAT-2,
GHGSat-C6,
GHGSat-C7, GHGSat-C8,
GHOSt (x2),
Hawk 7A, Hawk 7B, Hawk 7C,
IMECE,
InspireSat-7,
Lynk Tower 5, Lynk Tower 6, Lynk Tower 7, Lynk Tower 8, Lynk Tower 9, Lynk Tower 10,
NORSAT-TD,
OMNI-LER1,
RoseyCubesat-1,
Sapling-2, Sateliot-0,
Spire Global,
TAIFA-1,
Tomorrow-R1,
Umbra-SAR 06?,
Vigoride VR-6 [DISCO-1, IRIS-C, LLITED A (ELaNa 40), LLITED B (ELaNa 40), REVELA, VIREO, hosted payload: SMPOD03, TASSA],
Wyvern-1.
Pierwszy stopień RN (B1063.10) w T+8' 26" wylądował na LZ-4 w Vandenberg.
http://lk.astronautilus.pl/n230401.htm#06

SpaceX Transporter-7 launch and Falcon 9 first stage landing

https://twitter.com/SpaceX/status/1647131755080712194
Here are some statistics for tonight's mission:
217th of a Falcon 9 rocket since 2010
227th launch of Falcon rocket family since 2006
10th launch of Falcon 9 booster B1063
157th flight of a reused Falcon booster
7th dedicated small satellite rideshare launch by SpaceX
39th SpaceX launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base
23rd Falcon 9 launch of 2023
24th orbital launch by SpaceX in 2023
7th orbital launch based out of Vandenberg in 2023
https://spaceflightnow.com/2023/04/13/falcon-9-transporter-7-mission-status-center/
https://twitter.com/cbs_spacenews/status/1647131700558716928
https://twitter.com/cbs_spacenews/status/1647147772909613061
https://twitter.com/cbs_spacenews/status/1647220399363485696
https://twitter.com/D_Orbit/status/1647160928339914753

Cytuj
IMECE (800kg, TÜBİTAK UZAY, Turkey)

Momentus Vigoride VR-6: (tug + 6 cubesats)
   LLITED A/B (2x 1.5U, Aerospace Corp)
   REVELA (3U, ARCA, Italy)
   DISCO-1 (1U, Aarhus U., Denmark)
   VIREO (3U, C3S, Hungary)
   IRIS-C (3U, NCKU, Taiwan) (via ISIL)
   (hosted payload) SMPOD03 (3U deployer, ARCA, Italy)
   (hosted payload) TASSA (deployable solar array)

Exolaunch (21 satellites, 16 cubesat, 5 microsat)
   SSS-2B (3U, TÜBİTAK UZAY, Turkey)
   DEWA SAT-2 (6U, DEWA, UAE) (built by NanoAvionics)
   Brokkr-1 (6U, AstroForge) (ORBASTRO-AF-1)
   BRO-9 (6U, Unseenlabs, France)
   LEMUR-2-ONREFLECTION (6U, Spire for KAUST, Saudi Arabla)
   LEMUR-2-ROMEO-N-LEO/GNSS-4 (3U, Spire) (LMR2394 / FM170)
   LEMUR-2-SPACEGUS/Adler-2 (6U, Spire for Adler) (LMR2372 / FM171)
   TAIFA-1 (3U, SayariLabs [Kenya], Endurosat)
   Connecta T2.1 (6U, Plan-S, Turkey)
   Sapling Giganteum (1U, Stanford Student Space Initiative)
   LS2F (?U, Lacuna Space)
   FACSAT-2 (6U, Colombian Air Force, GomSpace bus)
   RoseyCubesat-1 (1U, Orbital Solutions Monaco, ISIS platform)  (via ISIL)
   InspireSat 7 (2U, Latmos, France) (via ISIL)
   Sateliot-0 (Platform-3) (6U, Endurosat)
   Pleiades-Squared (Bronco Space at Cal Poly Pomona)
   NORSAT-TD (~40kg, Space Flight Laboratory on behalf of Norway Space Agency)
   NewSat 36-39 (4x microsat, Satellogic)

Maverick (6 satellites, 3 cubesat 3 microsat)
   KILICSAT (3U, Turkey)
   ITS ABOUT TIME (?U, TrustPoint)
   CIRBE (3U, CU Boulder/LASP)
   Tomorrow-R1 (85kg, Tomorrow.io)
   GHOSt (2x microsat, Orbital Sidekick)

D-Orbit ION (tug + 5 cubesats)
   EPICHyper-1 (6U, AAC Clyde Space for Wyvern)
   Kepler 20/21 (2x 6U)
   VCUB1 (6U, Visiona Tecnologia Espacial, Brazil)
   (undisclosed cubesat)
   (2 hosted payloads)

GHGSat-C6/C7/C8 (3x 15kg, GHGSat)

SEOPS
   Hawkeye 360 Cluster 7 (3x 33kg)

Umbra-06 (Umbra)

Celesis Excelsior memorial flight (cremated remains, mounted on a payload adapter, stayed on second stage)
https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=56357.0

SpaceX launches Transporter 7 rideshare mission from California
April 15, 2023 Stephen Clark


SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California with 51 small satellites and payloads. Credit: SpaceX
The Transporter 7 payload stack. Credit: SpaceX


(...) There were 51 payloads launched on the Transporter 7 mission, including CubeSats, microsatellites, hosted payloads, and orbital transfer vehicles, which have their own payloads to be released at a later time, according to SpaceX. (...)

Fifty of the Transporter 7 payloads were deployed in that orbit, followed by two more short firings by the upper stage engine to raise the rocket’s altitude to more than 420 miles (about 680 kilometers). The orbit adjustment also slightly changed the inclination to 98.2 degrees, setting up for separation of the largest payload on the Transporter 7 mission — Turkey’s IMECE Earth observation satellite — more than two-and-a-half hours into the mission.

The approximately 1,543-pound (700-kilogram) IMECE satellite is the first high-resolution Earth-imaging satellite to be built entirely by domestic Turkish industry. IMECE was mounted to the top of the multi-satellite adapter structure inside the Falcon 9’s payload fairing for launch.

Other payloads on the Transporter 7 mission included two CubeSat missions sponsored by NASA to study Earth’s upper atmosphere and radiation belts. The NASA-funded missions are led by research teams at the University of Colorado and Aerospace Corp.

Virginia-based HawkEye 360 had three radio frequency monitoring satellites on the Transporter 7 launch.

Satellogic, a remote sensing company headquartered in Uruguay, had four “NewSat” optical Earth-imaging microsatellites on the Falcon 9 rocket. There were three Lemur 2 CubeSats for Spire Global’s commercial weather monitoring and ship tracking constellation, plus three microsats for the Canadian company GHGSat, which is deploying a fleet of small spacecraft to monitor global greenhouse gas emissions.

The California-based startup company AstroForge, which aims to eventually mine asteroids, launched its first space mission on the Transporter 7 launch. The shoebox-size CubeSat will perform technology demonstrations in orbit to examine how future mining spacecraft could extract and refine asteroid materials. In order to complete the demonstration, the AstroForge tech demo mission carries a small amount of material on-board as a stand-in for asteroid specimens.

Kenya’s first operational Earth observation satellite, a toaster oven-size CubeSat called Taifa 1, was also aboard the Transporter 7 launch.

San Francisco-based Orbital Sidekick launched the first two satellites in its planned Global Hyperspectral Observation Satellite constellation, or GHOSt. The roughly 200-pound (90-kilogram) spacecraft were built by Astro Digital with hyperspectral Earth observation payloads to help track leaks and emissions from pipelines, search for minerals for mining and resource extraction, and pursue other commercial applications.

Amid other payloads, the mission also carried two orbital transfer vehicles from Momentus and D-Orbit. Each transfer vehicle, with its own customer payloads on-board, can perform orbital maneuvers to change altitude and inclination after separating from the Falcon 9 rocket.

Momentus said its Vigoride 6 transfer vehicle, using a water-based microwave electrothermal propulsion system, will deploy two NASA-funded CubeSats. It also carries several more payloads for commercial customers and research institutions, and will test new solar array technology.

D-Orbit’s transfer vehicle will deploy satellites for Kepler Communications, Visiona, and AAC Clyde Space. It also hosts non-separating payloads testing electronic intelligence-gathering technology and a control moment gyroscope.
https://spaceflightnow.com/2023/04/15/spacex-launches-transporter-7-rideshare-mission-from-california/

Transporter-7 Mission Flies, as Starship, Falcon Heavy Aim for Launches on Monday, Tuesday
by Ben Evans April 15, 2023

(...) 51-payload haul of CubeSats, MicroSats, “hosted” payloads and Orbital Transfer Vehicles (OTVs) whose objectives run the gamut from Earth observations to technology and from Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) to education for a diverse spread of customers from 13 sovereign nations. (...)

First out was the first of three Earth observation satellites, provided by the Canadian firm GHGSat, which specializes in the development of miniaturized technologies for high-resolution monitoring of greenhouse gas emissions. Traditionally named in honor of the children of GHGSat team-members, the three satellites aboard Transporter-7—“Mey-Lin”, “Océane” and “Gaspard”—completed pre-launch tests last December and all are equipped with a high-resolution interferometer to measure methane signatures in the atmosphere, with a daily revisit capability over key oil and gas production sites.

Next out were Turkey’s SSS-2B and KILICSAT satellites for education and amateur radio, the DEWASat-2 Earth observation and technology demonstration satellite for the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and France’s BRO-9, a small SIGINT geolocation platform tasked with detecting and tracking ships at sea. In rapid succession, others followed: a Kenyan Earth observation satellite, Turkey’s Connecta T2.1 CubeSat—equipped with a high-resolution multispectral camera to combine IoT data with Earth observations—and a Colombian Air Force payload dubbed “Chibiriquete”, which carries a spectrometer for cartography, topographical mapping and strategic intelligence objectives.

Other members of Transporter-7’s half-century haul of payloads included an Earth observation satellite from Monaco, a technology demonstrator from California State Polytechnic University at Pomona and the Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment (CIRBE), provided by the University of Colorado at Boulder, which seeks to investigate electrons within Earth’s inner radiation belt to determine their sources and behavior. CIRBE’s highly inclined orbit will enable it to conduct detailed measurements of electrons in the energy range from 3-3.5 MeV and protons from 6-35 MeV.

Three Lemur satellites, flying on behalf of Spire Global, were deployed, together with a quartet of Argentinian satellites and three HawkEye360 satellites, all devoted to Earth observations and geospatial imaging. Notably, the three Hawks were all built, integrated and tested at HawkEye360’s new Advanced Technology Center in Herndon, Va., and were shipped to Vandenberg just last month for stacking into the Falcon 9.

Further underscoring Transporter-7’s international flavor, payloads were deployed for Norway, Taiwan, Hungary, Italy and Denmark. Seventy-seven minutes after launch, the Italian firm D-Orbit’s ION Satellite Carrier Vehicle (SCV)-010—nicknamed “Masterful Matthaeus”—was released from the Falcon 9, laden with a suite of deployable CubeSats, followed at 82 minutes by Momentus’ Vigoride-6 Orbital Service Vehicle (OSV) “tug” with its own haul of seven payloads.

Vigoride-6 arrived at Vandenberg last month and carried seven technology demonstration payloads from the United States, Italy, Denmark, Hungary and Taiwan for deployment into a circular orbit at an altitude of 307 miles (495 kilometers). These included NASA’s twin Low-Latitude Ionosphere/Thermosphere Enhancements in Density (LLITED) spacecraft for “coincident” measurements of the ionosphere and thermosphere to characterize the Equatorial Temperature Wind Anomaly (ETWA) and Equatorial Ionization Anomaly (EIA). 

Another notable payload aboard Vigoride-6 was the “hosted” TApe Spring Solar Array (TASSA) demonstrator, which carries several sheets of flexible solar-cell material bonded to tape springs. In support of its payloads, Vigoride-6 was tasked with performing a sequence of maneuvers to test its on-board Microwave Electrothermal Thruster (MET)—which utilizes water propellant and produces thrust by expelling extremely hot gas through its nozzle—and conduct Perigee Reduction Maneuvers (PRMs) to reduce to a matter of months its intended decay time from orbit.

With the multitude of the Transporter-7 haul thus deployed, two more Merlin 1D+ Vacuum burns, lasting a couple seconds apiece, occurred at 106 and 151 minutes after launch. Finally, Turkey’s 1,800-pound (800-kilogram) İMECE high-resolution submillimeter-range Earth observation satellite was released at 155 minutes into the flight, to wrap up this overnight mission for SpaceX. Further multi-payload Transporter flights—the eighth and ninth in the series—are aiming for launch slots this coming October and in the first quarter of 2024, respectively. (...)
https://www.americaspace.com/2023/04/15/transporter-7-mission-flies-falcon-heavy-to-launch-next-week/

Momentus Launches Vigoride-6 Orbital Service Vehicle on SpaceX Transporter-7 Mission
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230413005886/en/Momentus-Launches-Vigoride-6-Orbital-Service-Vehicle-on-SpaceX-Transporter-7-Mission

Momentus Launches Vigoride-6 Orbital Service Vehicle on SpaceX Transporter-7 Mission
https://investors.momentus.space/news-releases/news-release-details/momentus-launches-vigoride-6-orbital-service-vehicle-spacex

Momentus Launches Vigoride-6 Orbital Service Vehicle on SpaceX Transporter-7 Mission
By Keith Cowing Press Release Momentus April 18, 2023
https://spaceref.com/space-commerce/momentus-launches-vigoride-6-orbital-service-vehicle-on-spacex-transporter-7-mission/

A Transporter-7 achievement: D-Orbit launches ION’s 10th orbital transportation mission
APRIL 17, 2023
https://news.satnews.com/2023/04/17/d-orbit-launches-ions-10th-orbital-transportation-mission/

Exolaunch Flawlessly Deploys 21 Satellites on Transporter-7 Rideshare Mission
APRIL, 2023
https://exolaunch.com/news_87
https://spacewatch.global/2023/04/exolaunch-deploys-21-satellites-on-transporter-7-mission/

https://news.satnews.com/2023/04/16/spacex-scheduled-to-move-51-payloads-from-vsfb-via-falcon-9-on-april-11th/
https://seopsllc.com/manifest
https://www.satnow.com/news/details/591-hawkeye-360-s-next-generation-cluster-7-satellites-successfully-launched-on-spacex-transporter-7-mission

A new Hungarian small satellite was launched into space
Johnson Breaking News 17 April 2023
https://hungary.postsen.com/local/154678/A-new-Hungarian-small-satellite-was-launched-into-space.html

https://spacenews.com/spacex-launches-seventh-transporter-rideshare-mission/
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2023/04/spacex-transporter-7/

İmece (800 kg)  Turcja https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/imece.htm
Umbra-SAR 06 (65 kg) USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/umbra-sar-2001.htm
ÑuSat 36 (NewSat 36, Aleph-1 36, Annie Jump Cannon) Argentyna https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/nusat-1.htm
ÑuSat 37 (NewSat 37, Aleph-1 37, Joan Clarke)
ÑuSat 38 (NewSat 38, Aleph-1 38, Maria Gaetana Agnesi)
ÑuSat 39 (NewSat 39, Aleph-1 39, Tikvah Alper)
GHOSt 1 (85 kg) USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ghost-1.htm
GHOSt 2
Tomorrow R1 (86 kg) USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/tomorrow-r1.htm
GHGSat C6 (Mey-Lin) (15 kg) Kanada https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ghgsat-d.htm
GHGSat C7 (Gaspard)
GHGSat C8 (Océane)
Hawk 7A USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/hawk-2a.htm
Hawk 7B
Hawk 7C
NORSAT TD Norwegia https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/norsat-td.htm
ION-SCV 010 (ION-SCV 010 Masterful Matthaeus) dyspenser Włochy https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ion-scv-2.htm
    EPICHyper 1 (Dragonette 001)
    VCUB1
    Kepler 20 CubeSat (6UXL) Kanada https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/kepler-4.htm
    Kepler 21
    (undisclosed)
Vigoride 6 dyspener, USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/vigoride.htm
    LLITED 1 CubeSat (1.5U)   USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/llited.htm
    LLITED 2
    REVELA
    DISCO 1
    VIREO
    IRIS C  CubeSat (3U)  (4 kg) Tajwan https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/iris-c.htm
BRO 9 CubeSat (6U)  (6 kg) Francja https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/bro-1.htm
Brokkr 1 (OrbAstro AF-1) CubeSat (6U) USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/brokkr-1.htm
CIRBE CubeSat (3U)  USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/cirbe.htm
DEWA-Sat 2   CubeSat (3U) ZEA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/dewa-sat-2.htm
It's About Time   CubeSat (?U) USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/its-about-time.htm
KILIÇSAT   CubeSat (6U) (10 kg) Turcja https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/kilicsat.htm
SSS 2B   CubeSat (3U) Chiny, Turcja  https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/sss-2a.htm
Sapling 2 (Sapling Giganteum)   CubeSat (1U) (1,75 kg)  USA https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/sapling-1.htm
Pleiades-Squared  CubeSat (1U) (1,75 kg)  USA   https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/proves-yearling.htm
Platform 3 (Sateliot 0) (ex SharedSat 4)  CubeSat (6U) Bułgaria https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/spartan.htm
FACSAT 2 (Chibiriquete)   CubeSat (6U) Kolumbia https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/facsat-2.htm
Connecta T2.1   CubeSat (6U) Turcja https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/connecta-t2-1.htm
LacunaSat 2f (LS2f)   CubeSat (3U) U.K. https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/lacunasat-3.htm
ADLER 2 (Lemur-2 163, Lemur-2 SpaceGus)   CubeSat (6U) (6 kg) https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/adler-2.htm
Lemur-2 164 (Lemur-2 OnReflection) CubeSat (6U) Niemcy  https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/lemur-2_6u.htm
Lemur-2 165 (Lemur-2 Romeo-n-Leo)
INSPIREsat 7   CubeSat (2U)  (2 kg) Francja https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/inspiresat-7.htm
Taifa 1   CubeSat (3U) Kenia  https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/taifa-1.htm
RoseyCubesat 1   CubeSat (1U) (1 kg) Monako https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/roseycubesat-1.htm

https://twitter.com/planet4589/status/1651380461703184384
« Ostatnia zmiana: Kwiecień 30, 2023, 08:51 wysłana przez Orionid »

Polskie Forum Astronautyczne

Odp: Falcon 9 | Transporter-7 | 15.04.2023
« Odpowiedź #4 dnia: Kwiecień 26, 2023, 00:13 »