100. start boostera Block 5(100 razy w F9 [pomijając In-Flight Abort Test), w tym jeden w podwójnej konfiguracji. Poza tym 5 boosterów w konfiguracji FH tylko wystartowało). Czyli 106 razy boostery we wszystkich przypadkach w sumie startowały.
Owiewki odzyskane.Masowy start SpaceX 25.05. o 18:35:00 z Cape Canaveral wystrzelona została RN Falcon-9R. Wyniosła ona na orbitę w misji Transporter-5
satelity:
AMS,
BroncoSat 1,
CENTAURI-5,
CICERO-2 VEH 1, CICERO-2 VEH 2,
CNCE V4, CNCE V5,
CONNECTA T1.1,
FORESAIL-1,
GHGSat-C3 (Luca), GHGSat-C4 (Penny), GHGSat-C5 (Diako),
ICEYE X17, ICEYE X18, ICEYE X19, ICEYE X20, ICEYE X21,
ION SVC-006 THRILLING THO,
LEMUR 2 HANCOM-1, LEMUR 2 KAREN B, LEMUR 2 MIMI1307, LEMUR 2 TENNYSONLILY, LEMUR 2 VANDENDRIES,
ÑuSat 28, ÑuSat 29, ÑuSat 30, ÑuSat 31,
Planetum-1,
SharedSat 2141,
Sherpa-AC1 [Hawk 5A, Hawk 5B, Hawk 5C],
Spark-2,
SPIN-1,
STAR VIBE,
VariSat-1C,
Vigoride VR-3[
dwa dyspensery FOSSA PocketPOD (FOSSASat-2E7, FOSSASat-2E8, FOSSASat-2E9, FOSSASat-2E10, FOSSASat-2E11, FOSSASat-2E12, FOSSASat-2E13,
Veery FS-1),
SELFIESAT],
Umbra 03,
Urdaneta-Armsat1,
ELaNa 47: ProXopS i PTD 3.
Pierwszy stopień RN (B1061.8 ) wylądował na LZ-1.
http://lk.astronautilus.pl/n220516.htm#05


SpaceX Transporter-5 launch and Falcon 9 first stage landingWatch SpaceX deploy Transporter-5 rideshare satellites in spacehttps://twitter.com/TrevorMahlmann/status/1529536092260773893https://twitter.com/cbs_spacenews/status/1529516880276357120https://twitter.com/cbs_spacenews/status/1529533799305994240LAUNCH TIMELINE:T+00:00: Liftoff
T+01:12: Maximum aerodynamic pressure (Max-Q)
T+02:16: First stage main engine cutoff (MECO)
T+02:19: Stage separation
T+02:27: Second stage engine ignition
T+02:32: First stage boost-back burn ignition (three engines)
T+03:19: First stage boost-back burn ends
T+03:47: Fairing jettison
T+06:43: First stage entry burn ignition (three engines)
T+07:08: First stage entry burn ends
T+08:00: First stage landing burn ignition (one engine)
T+08:25: Second stage engine cutoff (SECO 1)
T+08:33: First stage landing
T+08:35: Nanoracks Outpost Mars Demo-1 experiment initiation
T+55:27: Second stage engine restart
T+55:59: Second stage engine cutoff (SECO 2)
T+59:00: GeoOptics CICERO 2 Vehicle 2 separation
T+59:09: SharedSat_2141 separation
T+59:17: Spire’s Lemur-2 Karen_B separation
T+59:18: NASA Pathfinder Technology Demonstrator 3 separation
T+59:37: Urdaneta separation
T+59:46: GeoOptics CICERO 2 Vehicle 1 separation
T+59:56: Spire’s Lemur 2 Vandendries separation
T+1:00:05: Omnispace Spark-2 separation
T+1:00:24: Spire’s Lemur 2 Tennysonlily separation
T+1:00:47: GHGSat-C4 Penny separation
T+1:01:00: Planetum 1 and SPiN 1 separation
T+1:01:09: Spire’s Lemur 2 Hancom-1 separation
T+1:01:21: GHGSat-C3 Luca separation
T+1:01:38: NASA CubeSat Proximity Operations Demonstration separation
T+1:01:50: Connecta T1.1 separation
T+1:01:59: Spire’s Lemur 2 Mimi1307 separation
T+1:02:13: GHGSat-C5 Diako separation
T+1:03:18: Foresail-1 separation
T+1:03:49: Fleet Space Centauri-5 separation
T+1:04:04: MDA’s CNCE V4 and CNCE V5 separation
T+1:04:20: Satellogic’s Newsat 28 separation
T+1:04:42: Spaceflight’s Sherpa-AC1 transfer vehicle separation
T+1:05:28: Varisat-1C separation
T+1:05:43: AMS separation
T+1:06:07: BroncoSat-1 separation
T+1:06:35: Satellogic’s Newsat 29 separation
T+1:08:19: Satellogic’s Newsat 30 separation
T+1:08:40: First ICEYE satellite separation
T+1:09:00: Satellogic’s Newsat 31 separation
T+1:09:22: D-Orbit’s ION SCV 006 transfer vehicle separation
T+1:09:44: Umbra separation
T+1:10:05: HawkEye 360’s Hawk-5B separation
T+1:10:26: HawkEye 360’s Hawk-5C separation
T+1:10:48: HawkEye 360’s Hawk-5A separation
T+1:11:17: Momentus’ Vigoride transfer vehicle separation
T+1:11:56: Second ICEYE satellite separation
T+1:12:29: Third ICEYE satellite separation
T+1:12:51: Fourth ICEYE satellite separation
T+1:15:22: Fifth ICEYE satellite separation
MISSION STATS:156th launch of a Falcon 9 rocket since 2010
164th launch of Falcon rocket family since 2006
8th launch of Falcon 9 booster B1061
136th Falcon 9 launch from Florida’s Space Coast
87th Falcon 9 launch from pad 40
142nd launch overall from pad 40
98th flight of a reused Falcon 9 booster
5th Transporter rideshare mission launched by SpaceX
22nd Falcon 9 launch of 2022
22nd launch by SpaceX in 2022
22nd orbital launch based out of Cape Canaveral in 2022
https://spaceflightnow.com/2022/05/25/falcon-9-transporter-5-live-coverage/https://twitter.com/JerryPikePhoto/status/1530293647878545411On board this flight were 59 spacecraft, including including CubeSats, microsats, non-deploying hosted payloads, and orbital transfer vehicles.
https://www.spacex.com/launches/transporter-5/The dedicated ride-share mission successfully carried "fifty-nine" deployable, Tugs and passive payloads/test beds in orbit. (...)
The Transporter-5 manifests thirty-nine primary loads (59 Overall) from different nations including the United States, Canada, Germany, Italy, Spain, Australia, Bulgaria, Brazil, Czech Republic, Turkey, Finland, Argentina and Norway.
https://www.spaceintel101.com/post/spacex-launched-transporter5-missionSBUDNIC
https://engineering.brown.edu/news/2022-05-16/sbudnic-satellite-launchSELFIESAT
SelfieSat-1 is the first operational student satellite from Norway, built entirely in-house from off the shelf parts. Its bus contains a Raspberry Pi which serves as the payload computer for the satellite. The 1.8 kg satellite will, once deployed, extend a “selfie stick” which has a Raspberry Pi camera mounted on the end. Pointed back at the satellite, which has an LCD screen mounted on it, the camera will image the screen, satellite, and Earth.
Prior to launch, students in schools from around Norway submitted various images of themselves, pets, and friends to be stored on the satellite prior to launch. About one week after launch when teams in Norway have made contact with the satellite, the LCD screen will begin to display the stored images, take pictures of them, and beam the results back to Earth. Operations will be conducted from Trondheim, Norway with the team’s own ground station and radio tower.
https://everydayastronaut.com/falcon-9-block-5-transporter-5-dedicated-sso-rideshare/https://www.esero.no/prosjekter/selfiesat/Foresail-1
https://www.aalto.fi/en/news/launch-of-science-satellite-foresail-1-scheduled-for-25-mayPlanetum 1
https://kulturio.cz/planetum-1/https://www.ceskenoviny.cz/zpravy/z-floridy-odstartovala-raketa-falcon-9-s-ceskou-druzici-a-hurvinkem-na-palube/2211356https://www.spacemanic.com/news/planetum-1-to-launch-on-may-25th/https://www.spacemanic.com/news/planetum-1-reveals-mission-patch-and-launch-date/Connecta T1.1
https://db.satnogs.org/satellite/RLGA-3050-8635-4193-2562https://www.plan.space/technology/connecta-t1-1Urdaneta-Armsat1
https://satlantis.com/urdaneta-launch/https://seraphim.vc/news/spacex-launch-falcon-9-rocket-with-59-payloads-including-satellites-from-5-seraphim-portfolio-companies/https://www.geekwire.com/2022/spacex-launches-59-payloads-including-spaceflights-latest-breed-of-orbital-tug/https://www.satelliteevolution.com/post/spaceflight-inc-successfully-debuts-its-latest-otv-sherpa-achttps://payloadspace.com/spacex-launches-transporter-5/https://twitter.com/AaltoSatellites/status/1529452382605672449https://twitter.com/AaltoSatellites/status/1529465007834112000Momentus Launches First Demonstration Flight on SpaceX Falcon 9May 27, 2022 05:19 PM Eastern Daylight Time

(...) The versatile Vigoride spacecraft, designed to support a range of transportation and in-space infrastructure services, is slated to perform a series of operations in space to test and demonstrate the performance of the vehicle and its subsystems. Under the company's license from the Federal Communications Commission,
the mission is scheduled to last up to 180 days. The mission will also feature the deployment of several customer satellites and the testing of hardware for another customer. (...)
A key part of the Vigoride vehicle is the
Microwave Electrothermal Thruster (MET) which uses water as a propellant. The MET produces thrust by expelling extremely hot gases through a rocket nozzle. However, unlike a conventional chemical rocket engine, which creates heat through a chemical reaction, the MET heats propellant using solar microwave energy. Using the MET offers cost-effective, efficient, safe, and environmentally friendly propulsion to meet the demands for in-space transportation and infrastructure services.
On this first flight, Momentus welcomes FOSSA Systems and Orbit NTNU among its customers.
FOSSA is deploying multiple picosatellites as part of a constellation to provide global and real-time Internet of Things (IoT) connectivity for industrial applications. Orbit NTNU will be using its payload,
SelfieSat, to take a selfie from a satellite in space (the payload has an external screen, displaying pictures sent up by the public while a camera mounted on an arm photographs the screen with the Earth in the background.)
In addition to Vigoride, Momentus used a second port on the Falcon 9 to fly a third-party deployer from a trusted partner. Momentus used this deployer to place its first customer satellite from Bronco Space at the California State Polytechnic University at Pomona in orbit. Four other satellite payloads that are customers of the deployer system partner were also placed in orbit. (...)
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220525005971/en/Momentus-Launches-First-Demonstration-Flight-on-SpaceX-Falcon-9Exolaunch Preps for Biggest Launch Yet With SpaceX Transporter-5 Mission
(...) Transporter-5 carries Exolaunch's biggest mission to date, with more than 20 satellites from new and repeat customers (...)

(...) Transporter-5 will launch Exolaunch's new and returning customers, including Spire Global, Satellogic, ICEYE, NanoAvionics, Omnispace, Thales Alenia Space, Satlantis, EnduroSat, Plan-S, Spacemanic, Aalto University and Space Products and Innovation. The customers' payloads will enable space application technologies such as Optical and Synthetic Aperture Radar observation, Maritime Surveillance, and IoT communications. (...)
https://exolaunch.com/news-block-53.htmlWHO’S ONBOARD TRANSPORTER 5?By Jodi Sorensen MAY 23, 2022

(...) We’ll be taking 5 spacecraft, including 2 hosted payloads onboard our Sherpa OTV, to Sun Synchronous orbit, 525km, on a Falcon 9. (...)
The team readies the Sherpa-AC OTV for flight at Spaceflight’s integration facility.(...)Here’s more about the customer payloads on Spaceflight’s Transporter 5 mission:
Xona Space’s Huginn Mission (...)
NearSpace Launch Inc.’s TROOP-3:
TROOP-3 (Train-Rapid on Orbit Payload) will provide 24/7 telemetry plus critical mission data while hosting payloads for experimental testing. As a hosted payload,
TROOP will remain attached to the Sherpa OTV for the duration of the vehicle’s life in orbit, which will be around eight years. NearSpace Launch’s goal is to help organizations track and report the location of their spacecraft to fight orbit debris and is planning many more missions with Spaceflight to enable these capabilities for more organizations.
MIT Lincoln Laboratory’s Agile Micro Sat (...)
Missile Defense Agency’s CNCE Block 2 (...)
https://spaceflight.com/whos-onboard-transporter-5/
Spaceflight Inc.’s Sherpa-AC tug is equipped with a command and control system. (Spaceflight Inc. Illustration)https://www.geekwire.com/2022/spacex-launches-59-payloads-including-spaceflights-latest-breed-of-orbital-tug/The Infinite Blue mission includes satellites from Aistech (Guardian) and from Brown University (SBUDNIC), in collaboration with the Institute on Atmospheric Pollution of the National Research Council of Italy. ION SCV006 hosts also payloads from Cryptosat and Genergo for in-orbit demonstration.
https://www.dorbit.space/infinite-bluehttps://www.dorbit.space/_files/ugd/64a0e4_cbbbe7828b2f49f1b874dc153627628c.pdfhttps://seraphim.vc/news/spacex-launch-falcon-9-rocket-with-59-payloads-including-satellites-from-5-seraphim-portfolio-companies/https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2022/05/25/2450797/0/en/D-Orbit-Launches-its-Sixth-ION-Satellite-Carrier-Mission.htmlActualización / Update 🚀
Tras la misión #Transporter5 el historial de vuelo de los boosters del Falcon 9 sigue creciendo.
https://twitter.com/SpaceNosey/status/1529538748547010560https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2022/05/transporter-5-launch/AA
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=4368.msg176825#msg176825Umbra 03
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/umbra-sar-2001.htmICEYE 17
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/iceye-x4.htmICEYE 18
ICEYE 19
ICEYE 20
ICEYE 21
ÑuSat 28 (NewSat 28, Aleph-1 28, Alice Lee)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/nusat-1.htmÑuSat 29 (NewSat 29, Aleph-1 29, Edith Clarke)
ÑuSat 30 (NewSat 30, Aleph-1 30, Margherita Hack ?)
ÑuSat 31 (NewSat 31, Aleph-1 31, Ruby Payne-Scott)
GHGSat C3 (Luca)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ghgsat-d.htmGHGSat C4 (Penny)
GHGSat C5 (Diako)
Hawk 5A
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/hawk-2a.htmHawk 5B
Hawk 5C
CICERO-2 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/cicero-2.htmCICERO-2 2
Sherpa-AC 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/sherpa-ac.htm ION-SCV 006 (Infinite Blue)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ion-scv-2.htm Guardian 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/guardian.htm SBUDNIC
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/sbudnic.htmVigoride 3
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/vigoride.htm SELFIESAT
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/selfiesat.htm FossaSat 2E7
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/fossasat-2e.htm FossaSat 2E8
FossaSat 2E9
FossaSat 2E10
FossaSat 2E11
FossaSat 2E12
FossaSat 2E13
Veery FS-1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/veery_v0-2.htmUrdaneta-Armsat 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/urdaneta-armsat-1.htmSpark 2 (Omnispace LEO-2 / Omni L2)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/omnispace-1.htmAMS
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ams.htmCNCE Blk.2 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/cnce-blk1.htmCNCE Blk.2 2
Platform 1 (ex SharedSat 2)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/spartan.htmBroncoSat 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/broncosat-1.htmForesail 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/foresail-1.htmPlanetum 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/planetum-1.htmSPiN 1 (MA61C)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/spin-1.htmConnecta T1.1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/connecta-t1.htmCentauri 5
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/centauri-3.htmLemur-2 152 (Lemur-2 HANCOM-1)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/lemur-2_6u.htmLemur-2 153 (Lemur-2 Karen B)
Lemur-2 154 (Lemur-2 Mimi1307)
Lemur-2 155 (Lemur-2 TennysonLily)
Lemur-2 156 (Lemur-2 VanDenDries)
VariSat 1C
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/varisat-1.htmPTD 3 (Tyvak 0125)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ptd-3.htmCPOD A (Tyvak 0032) (PONSFD A)
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/cpod.htmCPOD B (Tyvak 0033) (PONSFD B)
OMD 1
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/mars-outpost-demo.htmc.d.
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=5029.msg177013#msg177013