143 satelity za jednym razem 24.01. o 15:00 z Cape Canaveral wystartowała RN Falcon-9R. Wyniosła ona w T+54' 37" na orbitę o parametrach:
hp=525 km, ha=525 km, i=9x° w ramach misji Transporter-1 rekordową ilość - 143 satelity.
Będą to:
Starlink (10 szt.),
ION SCV LAURENTIUS,
Hawk-2a, 2b, 2c,
GHGSat-C2 (Hugo),
ICEYE (3 szt),
Izanami,
SHERPA-FX,
Whitney 1, 2 (Capella 3, 4),
XR-1,
ARCE-1a, 1b, 1c,
ASELSAT,
Astrocast (5 szt.),
Aurora Insight's Charlie,
Flock 4s SuperDoves (48 szt.),
Kepler (8 szt.),
Lemur (8 szt.),
IDEASSat,
PIXL-1,
Prometheus 2.10,
PTD-1,
SOMP-2b,
UVSQ-SAT,
V-R3x (3 szt),
SpaceBEE (36 szt.) i
YUSAT.
Pierwszy stopień RN (B1058.5) w T+9' 42" wylądował na barce ASDS OCISLY na Atlantyku.
http://lk.astronautilus.pl/n210116.htm#05NanoRacks Eyries-1 – LEMUR-2 (8 sats), GHGSat-C2 (Hugo)
Exolaunch Zeitgeist – Charlie, SOMP2b, PIXL-1, ICEYE (3 sats), SpaceBee (24 sats)
Spaceflight SXRS-3 – HawkEye Cluster 2 (3 sats), PTD-1, Astrocast (5 sats), ARCE (3 sats), Prometheus 2.10, iQPS-SAR 2 (Izanami), ELROI (hosted), TAGSAT-1 (hosted), Celestis 17 (hosted)
D-Orbit Pulse – SuperDove (8 sats), SpaceBee (12 sats), DRAGO (hosted)
ISILaunch-34 – Kepler GEN1 (8 sats), SuperDove (40 sats), YUSAT-1 + IDEASSat, UVSQ-SAT, ASELSAT, Hiber Four
Other payloads – Starlink (10 sats), Capella Whitney (2 sats), V-R3x (3 sats),
https://www.elonx.net/spacex-smallsat-rideshare-missions/SpaceX Transporter-1 launch & Falcon 9 first stage landing5325 wyświetleń•24 sty 2021
Transporter-1 143 satellites deployment2635 wyświetleń•24 sty 2021
SpaceX – misja Transporter-1 BY KRZYSZTOF KANAWKA ON 25 STYCZNIA 2021
(...) Rakieta Falcon 9 została skierowana na orbitę heliosynchroniczną polarną (SSO). Był to drugi lot tego typu w ostatnich latach, od czasu wprowadzenia możliwości lotów rakiet na orbity polarne z Florydy. Podczas lotu rakieta przeleciała nad Kubą. Poprzedni został wykonany 31 sierpnia 2020. (...)
Satelity w tym locie były uwalniane przez kilkanaście minut. Uwalnianie zakończyło się na satelitach Starlink.
Co ciekawe, pojawiają się coraz częściej komentarze, że jednoczesne wynoszenie wielu zminiaturyzowanych satelitów może przysparzać problemy dla operatorów satelitów. Wymienia się m.in. trudności z nawiązaniem komunikacji po uwolnieniu satelity czy identyfikację “który jest który”. (...)
https://kosmonauta.net/2021/01/spacex-misja-transporter-1/https://www.urania.edu.pl/wiadomosci/falcon-9-wynosi-143-satelity-w-jednym-locieSpaceX Launches Transporter-1 Rideshare Mission, Logs Third Mission in 3 WeeksBy Ben Evans, on January 24th, 2021
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launching the Transporter-1 mission Jan 24, 2021 to deliver 143 commercial and government “rideshare” payloads into orbit. Photo: Alan Walters / AmericaSpace.comLess than eight months after it triumphantly lofted NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken aboard Dragon Endeavour to begin their historic voyage to the International Space Station (ISS), the B1058 Falcon 9 core roared aloft a fifth time early Sunday to deliver a multitude of commercial and government “rideshare” payloads into low-Earth orbit. All told,
143 payloads—the greatest number of satellites ever launched on a single mission—rode uphill at 10 a.m. EST, including the first ten Starlink internet communications satellites bound for polar orbit. (...)
As of this morning, a mere 239 days had elapsed since B1058 set off on her maiden voyage with Hurley and Behnken on their “Excellent Adventure”. In doing so, she neatly surpasses fleet leader B1051, which held the previous record of having flown her most recent five missions in just 273 days between April 2020 and last Wednesday. (...)
Flying a second time in only 51 days, B1058 eclipsed an almost 35-year-old record for the shortest period between two launches by a reusable, orbital-class booster. She broke the 54-day launch-to-launch record set by shuttle Atlantis’ STS-61B crew, way back in November 1985. (...)
Taking pride of place on
today’s flight was the first SHERPA-FX commercial satellite dispenser, officially unveiled last summer and provided by Seattle, Wash.-headquartered smallsat launch provider Spaceflight, Inc. An earlier variant of the SHERPA was used on the firm’s first dedicated rideshare mission with SpaceX, the SSO-A SmallSat Express, launched out of Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., with a record-breaking 64 discrete payloads, back in December 2018. SSO-A represented the largest quantity of smallsats ever launched by a U.S. rocket at that time.
But a new generation of SHERPAs—the first of which flew today—carry a far broader range of capabilities, acting as an Orbital Transfer Vehicle (OTV) and effectively providing the Falcon 9 with a third stage. With a total spacecraft mass of around 850 pounds (385 kg), SHERPA-FX has the functionality to physically separate from the second stage of the rocket, using its own integrated avionics, before initially any of its smallsat deployments. “The vehicle,” noted Spaceflight, Inc., “is capable of executing multiple deployments, providing independent and detailed deployment telemetry and flexible interfaces.”
Spaceflight, Inc.’s SHERPA commercial satellite dispenser. Image Credit: Spaceflight, Inc.Credit: Spaceflight IncCredit: Spaceflight Inc(...)
Spaceflight, Inc.’s primary payload for Transporter-1 reportedly comprises 16 small satellites, 15 of which will reside directly on the SHERPA-FX. “Not only is it the debut flight of our next-generation SHERPA,” said Spaceflight, Inc.’s Senior Mission Manager Ryan Olcott, “we managed the end-to-end launch experience for ten CubeSats, four microsats and two hosted payloads, all during a global pandemic.”
In addition to Spaceflight, Inc.’s dedicated payloads, the Transporter-1 mission carried dozens of small CubeSats, microsats and orbital transfer vehicles for commercial and government customers. (...)
Over an approximately 40-minute period, the payloads were separated, some singly, some in groups, with the ten Starlink satellites departing last. With 143 discrete payloads deployed, today’s launch eclipses the February 2017 flight of India’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) with 104 satellites aboard.
https://www.americaspace.com/2021/01/24/spacex-launches-transporter-1-rideshare-mission-logs-third-mission-in-3-weeks/#more-151081SpaceX smashes record with launch of 143 small satellitesJanuary 24, 2021 Stephen Clark
(...) SpaceX did not publicize the total number of satellites on the Transporter-1 mission until less than 24 hours before the first launch attempt, and the company has not released a list of every satellite carried to orbit Sunday.
Spaceflight Now was able to create a list of the payloads using regulatory filings, customer disclosures, and other sources.
James Russell, principal investigator for NASA’s AIM atmospheric research satellite at Hampton University, said launches of large clusters of satellites can put other spacecraft at risk. Russell said the AIM satellite flies at roughly the same altitude as the Transporter-1 mission’s target orbit.
“It’s an uncalculated collision risk,” Russell told Spaceflight Now “They have not calculated what the collision probability is once they launch the smaller satellites.” (...)
Here’s a list of all 143 satellites launched on the Transporter-1 mission:
48 SuperDove satellites for Planet
36 SpaceBEE satellites for Swarm
10 Starlink satellites for SpaceX
8 GEN1 satellites for Kepler
8 Lemur-2 satellites for Spire
5 Astrocast satellites
3 HawkEye 360 satellites
3 ICEYE satellites
3 V-R3x satellites for NASA
3 ARCE-1 satellites for the University of South Florida
2 Capella satellites
Sherpa-FX space tug for Spaceflight
D-Orbit’s ION SCV Laurentius space tug
iQPS-2 for iQPS of Japan
YUSAT for Taiwan’s Ministry of Science and Technology
IDEASSAT for Taiwan’s Ministry of Science and Technology
UVQS-SAT for LATMOS of France
ASELSAT for ASELSAN of Turkey
Hiber Four for Hiber of the Netherlands
SOMP2b for TU Dresden of Germany
PIXL-1 for DLR of Germany
Charlie for U.S.-based Aurora Insight
Hugo for GHGSat of Canada
PTD-1 for NASA
Prometheus for Los Alamos National Laboratory
(...)
https://spaceflightnow.com/2021/01/24/spacex-launches-record-setting-rideshare-mission-with-143-small-satellites/https://spaceflightnow.com/2021/01/23/falcon-9-launch-timeline-on-the-transporter-1-mission/https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2021/01/transporter-1-rideshare-program-debut/AA
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=3641.msg156704#msg156704Starlink v0.9 R1-1 - 10
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/starlink-v0-9.htm (10)
Starlink v0.9 R1-2
Starlink v0.9 R1-3
Starlink v0.9 R1-4
Starlink v0.9 R1-5
Starlink v0.9 R1-6
Starlink v0.9 R1-7
Starlink v0.9 R1-8
Starlink v0.9 R1-9
Starlink v0.9 R1-10
QPS-SAR 2 (Izanami)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/qps-sar-1.htmCapella 3 (Capella Whitney 1)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/capella-2.htmCapella 4 (Capella Whitney 2)
ICEYE X8
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/iceye-x4.htmICEYE X9
ICEYE X10
GHGSat C2 (Hugo)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ghgsat-d.htmHawk 2A
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/hawkeye.htmHawk 2B
Hawk 2C
Sherpa-FX 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/sherpa-fx.htmION-SCV 2 (ION-SCV Laurentius)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ion-scv-2.htmCharlie
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/charlie.htmHiber 4
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/hiber-4.htmASELSAT
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/aselsat.htmPIXL 1 (CubeL)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/pixl-1.htmSOMP 2b
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/somp-2.htmIDEASSat
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ideassat.htmYUSAT 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/yusat-1.htmUVSQ-SAT
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/uvsq-sat.htmV-R3x 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/v-r3x.htmV-R3x 2
V-R3x 3
Flock-4s 1 (Dove 2436)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/flock-1.htm (48)
Kepler 8 - 15
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/kepler-4.htm (8 )
Astrocast 1.x1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/astrocast-0.htm (5)
SpaceBEE x1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/spacebee-10.htm (36)
Lemur-2 130 - 137
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/lemur-2.htm (8 )
PTD 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ptd-1.htmPrometheus-2 10
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/prometheus-2.htmARCE 1A
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/arce-1.htmARCE 1B
ARCE 1C