Archive for the ‘Spacex’ Category

SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch of ViaSat-3 Americas satellites moved to Thursday – FOX 35 Orlando

ORLANDO, Fla. - SpaceX has pushed the launch of the ViaSat-3 Americas communications satellitesatop its Falcon Heavy rocket to Thursday, citing additional time needed to complete data reviews.

The 57-minute launch window will now open at 7:29 p.m. on Thursday, and SpaceX's live broadcast ahead of the launch is scheduled to begin at 7:15 p.m., according to SpaceX's website.

In a tweet, SpaceX said it needed more time to complete data reviews. It was originally expected to launch on Wednesday. If Thursday does not work out either, a backup launch date will be available on Friday evening, April 29.

Residents along Florida's Space Coast are familiar with a typical Falcon 9 rocket configuration. A Falcon Heavy configuration includes a center core on which two Falcon 9 boosters are attached, with the second stage atop the center core.

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SpaceX launched its Falcon Heavy rocket from Florida's Space Coast on Sunday successfully launching its USSF-67 mission.

ViaSat-3 is a constellation of three ultra-high-capacity, Ka-band satellites expected to increase our global coverage and network capacity to bring connectivity where needed. When fully operational, the network is expected to enable billions in homes and businesses, on planes and at sea, and in communities that were once off the grid to connect with the people and information they need.

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SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch of ViaSat-3 Americas satellites moved to Thursday - FOX 35 Orlando

Proposed SpaceX expansion environmental report expected soon – News 13 Orlando

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. The sights, sounds and aftermath of SpaceXstest launchof its massive Starship rocket is still very much on the minds of many around the world.

That includes those in Florida, like Frank DiBello, who are watching the progress of SpaceX working towards bringing Starship launch capability to the Sunshine State.

It was exciting, clearly, and in many ways it was a successful test launch, which is what it was intended to be, said DiBello, the CEO and president ofSpace Florida, in an interview with Spectrum News. They achieved flight in a way that they learned a lot from the things that might not have gone wrong.

DiBello has been at the helm of Space Florida, an organization designed to help foster investment in Floridas aerospace economy and expand industry growth, for the past 15 years.

He said seeing the automated flight termination system trigger and destroy Starship was not surprising given the anomaly during its first test flight. DiBello believes SpaceX and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the agency that oversees both launch licenses and commercial spaceflight mishaps, learned a lot to make improvements for the future.

The company learned a lot in this display, both about the rocket itself as well as the launch system and the impact on the ground, DiBello said. Thats a big rocket. So, I suspect it will cause a lot of learning to be infused back into the design of the improvements that were making to the pad here. And clearly, you want to be able to build it so that it can be used multiple times, which is their plan.

I see no reason why they cant do with Starship what theyve been doing with the Falcon 9, he added.

SpaceX received a finalEnvironmental Assessmentfrom NASAs Kennedy Space Center in 2019 to begin construction of a Starship launch tower at the Launch Complex 39A pad. Eagle-eyed launch watchers could see much of the vertical work happening over the course of 2022 in the background of dozens of Falcon 9 launches and one Falcon Heavy launch.

SpaceX is also making other moves to accommodate its powerful, new rocket. In coordination with NASA, the company is in the midst of building a second crew access tower at Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station to mirror its capabilities at Launch Complex 39A.

The redundancy would give NASA a second, Florida-based pad to send crew and cargo to the International Space Station. Currently, crew only launch from Launch Complex 39A and cargo missions, formally Commercial Resupply Services missions, are launched by SpaceX in Florida and Northrop Grumman from NASAs Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.

In tandem with the launch capability expansion, SpaceX is also working with NASA on approval for expanding its footprint at KSC. Don Dankert, an environmental scientist within Kennedys Environmental Management Branch, said they are working to develop an environmental assessment for that proposed 100-acre expansion along Roberts Road at KSC.

It would extend the SpaceX facilities, known as Hangar X, in order to consolidate all of the companys operations across Brevard County. Dankert said that assessment should be available for public review probably within the next couple of months. It follows a period ofpublic scopingthat involved getting feedback from the public on the initial proposal.

Theyll see a full and detailed analysis of the proposal, which is to expand the Roberts Road campus. Theres a proposed 100-acre parcel, an evaluation of the various alternatives we looked at and a detailed analysis of all the potential environmental effects of moving forward with that proposal, Dankert said.

Even if SpaceX were to get the seal of approval to move forward with its expansion proposal, that doesnt mean that it could start a Florida launch campaign right away. Dankert said now that Starship has flown for the first time, they will take a close look at the impacts of that launch and subsequent others and compare them to their first Environmental Assessment.

We want to understand what we evaluated in 2019 in the EA, if the concept of operations, or as SpaceX continues to learn more about that program and the vehicle and we do as well, if theres a delta there, if theres something that we would need to go back and look at from an environmental perspective to ensure that were not going to have any unforeseen impacts, Dankert said.

He said the team at KSC is interested to get a detailed report of impacts on structures and natural resources surrounding the launch site near Boca Chica, Texas.

Of course, SpaceX will also need to receive a launch license to launch Starship from Florida as well. The agency is currently going through a mishap investigation alongside SpaceX to fully evaluate the test flight from Texas.

A return to flight of the Starship/Super Heavy vehicle is based on the FAA determining that any system, process, or procedure related to the mishap does not affect public safety. This is standard practice for all mishap investigations, the agency said in a statement.

Videos showing the debris and ejecta that scattered from the orbital launch mount (OLM) got a lot of people talking about the wider impacts of the Starship flight test. The FAA offered the following statement on Wednesday in regard to the potential environmental impacts of the mission:

The Anomaly Response Plan referenced in the 2022Programmatic Environmental Assessmenthas been activated. In addition, otherenvironmental mitigationsrequire that SpaceX must have ongoing monitoring of vegetation and wildlife by a qualified biologist. This includes conducting a pre- and post-launch survey and submitting a report to the FAA and to the other involved state or federal agencies. There are also required mitigations specific to SpaceX coordinating with state or federal agencies to remove launch debris from sensitive habitats. The FAA will ensure SpaceX complies with all required mitigations. Furthermore, the FAA made compliance with the environmental mitigations a condition of thelicense.

The agency went on to state that SpaceX must coordinate with state and federal agencies to remove launch debris from sensitive habitats.

In a Twitter response to Ars Technicas Senior Space Editor Eric Berger, SpaceX founder Elon Musk said based on early assessments, the team needs to make some notable upgrades before attempting to launch again.

DiBello said SpaceX is taking the right steps to get closer to launching Starship with regularity, like its Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets.

I think theyre doing the right thing to build it, test it, learn from any failures that are there and then build it and test again, DiBello said. And the more that they can do that, the more theyre going to drive down the concern areas over how large a rocket is or what its reliability may be. Thats what it takes to get a new rocket system going.

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Proposed SpaceX expansion environmental report expected soon - News 13 Orlando

SpaceX to take over West Coast launch pad previously used by ULA – SpaceNews

WASHINGTON SpaceX is getting a second launch pad on the West Coast after gaining approval to lease Space Launch Complex 6 (SLC-6) at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California, a historic site previously occupied by United Launch Alliance.

Space Launch Delta 30, the Space Force unit that manages the West Coast launch ranges, announced April 24 that SpaceX will use the pad to launch Falcon rockets.

SpaceX is expanding operations at Vandenberg it has leased SLC-4 since 2015 following a period of extraordinary growth fueled by commercial launch demand and the deployment of its Starlink internet mega-constellation. SLC-6 would be SpaceXs fifth launch site in the United States. Besides SLC-4 at Vandenberg, it has two launch pads in Florida and one at Starbase in south Texas.

The company launched 61 orbital missions in 2022, nearly doubling its previous single-year record of 31 launches set in 2021. It has set a goal of 100 launches for 2023.

The enormous SLC-6 launch site went up for grabs after the final flight of ULAs Delta 4 Heavy on Sept. 24. ULA will consolidate West Coast launch operations for its new vehicle Vulcan Centaur at SLC-3, where Atlas 5 lifted off for the last time in November.

This is an exciting time for Vandenberg Space Force Base, said Col. Robert Long, commander of Space Launch Delta 30. This agreement will add to the rich history of SLC-6 and builds on the already strong partnership with SpaceX.

SCL-6 was originally built in the 1960s to launch the Air Forces never-flown Manned Orbital Laboratory. It was repurposed in the 1980s as a dedicated launch and landing site for military space shuttle missions. But Air Force mothballed the California site without ever conducting a West Coast shuttle launch. It reactivated the site in the 1990s for a handful of Lockheed Martin Athena launches and turned it over to ULA in 2006 for the Delta 4 program.

Northrop Grumman in 2019 announced it planned to use SLC-6 to launch the Omega solid rocket that it was developing for the National Security Space Launch Phase 2 competition. But the company discontinued the program after losing out to ULA and SpaceX for the NSSL Phase 2 contracts.

U.S. launch ranges in transition

In an interview last week at the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Long said there were many interested parties competing for the SLC-6 lease.

He said the Space Force looks at many different factors when allocating launch facilities to commercial providers. Anytime you take a launch site and you tie that up for years or decades, you want to make sure the government is getting value out of that launch property. And so we go through that entire assessment and then make a decision on who comes next.

Col. James Horne, deputy director of launch and range operations at the Space Forces Space Systems Command, said partnerships with commercial launch providers are a matter of national security because the military relies on these companies for access to space.

Both the East Coast and West Coast launch ranges are taking significant steps to accommodate commercial growth, he told SpaceNews.

The Florida ranges at Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center are projecting 92 orbital launches in 2023, compared to 57 in 2022. At Vandenberg, launches are expected to double from 19 last year to nearly 40 in 2023.

We benefit from the innovation in the commercial industry, said Horne.

Col Mark Shoemaker, vice commander of the Space Launch Delta 45 unit that oversees Cape Canaveral, noted that launch cadence is one way the United States and China compete as space powers.

The United States in 2021 for the first time was outpaced by China which launched 55 space missions, compared to 43 by the U.S.

Its all about space access, Shoemaker said in an interview. And theres no space access without the spaceports, and what were doing is enabling the nations capacity in space, whether its for national security, civil or commercial.

As the owners of the launch ranges, we need to stay ahead of this wave of need from the industry, and we need to do it from a military and national security perspective, but we need to do that in partnership with our commercial companies, Long said.

Conversations with launch executives at the recent Space Symposium confirmed that the tempo is not going to decrease anytime in the near future, Long added. And those forecasts strongly shape the Space Forces launch pad allocation strategies.

Horne noted that the Pentagons proposed five-year budget for fiscal years 2024-2028 has $1 billion worth of investments in federal spaceport infrastructure. Were ramping up, he said.

At the Cape, particularly, there is limited real estate, Horne said, so the Space Force continuously works with the Federal Aviation Administration, NASA and other agencies to figure out ways to squeeze in more launch opportunities.

Shoemaker pointed out that the ranges typically approve a much larger number of launches than actually take place. Its because the satellites are not ready for many of the launches were ready to support.

The Space Force, meanwhile, has advocated for a commercial business model that would allow the ranges to operate more like airports or seaports, Horne noted. This would help support growth initiatives the industry has asked for.

By law, DoD pays to operate and maintain the ranges and cannot accept private funding for infrastructure upgrades. Horne said the Space Force is open to other business models as long as they dont impact the competitiveness of the U.S. industry.

Some of these reforms are being considered by Congress and would require new legislation. We want to be able to launch 300 missions a year between the East and West ranges, Horne said, as long as it can be done without compromising safety. We will do what we need for national security purposes and still maximize the opportunity for commercial industry.

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SpaceX to take over West Coast launch pad previously used by ULA - SpaceNews

The best SpaceX Starship merch on Amazon – Space.com

SpaceX's Starship is expected to launch on Thursday April 20 following the delay of it's initial launch date of Monday, April 17. In light of its first orbital launch, we've rounded up the coolest Starship-themed items - or Starship swag - you can get on Amazon.

It doesn't matter if you're wanting something to wear or something cool to look at, there's a lot of out-of-this Starship products you can get. Of course, we've rounded up the very best but we've also made sure to include something for everyone and every budget, regardless of needs and wants. However, if outer space is your thing, but SpaceX isn't, you can always discover the best telescopes, telescope deals and best binoculars and explore the known universe yourself.

The launch itself is due to take place at SpaceX's Starbase facility near Boca Chica, Texas at 9:28 a.m. EDT during a 62-minute window that will last until 10:30 a.m. It will not take you quite that long to secure your share of SpaceX stash but some of the highlights below include a blueprint T-shirt (opens in new tab) and a sizable, buildable model (opens in new tab).

Whether it's something that looks cool, something to wear or something to build, you can show your passion for spaceflight and celebrate SpaceX's Starship orbital launch in a range of different ways.

When it comes to the individual items, we've made sure to only include ones made of quality materials. The metal signs feature quality metal as well as pre-drilled holes for easy instillation. The building kit features non-toxic materials and smooth edges while the desktop model is made of alloy steel. The T-shirts are machine washable, made of cotton and most importantly, everything looks amazing.

We've explained everything you need to know when it comes to SpaceX's Starship orbital launch. It's a significant launch not just in terms of spaceflight, as it's the tallest and most powerful launch vehicle ever build, but it's also Starship's first orbital launch.

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The best SpaceX Starship merch on Amazon - Space.com

Not Tesla Or SpaceX: Here’s Elon Musk’s Greatest Contribution To Society, Says Indian Billionaire – Benzinga

April 26, 2023 8:50 AM | 2 min read

Over the years, Elon Musk has been praised for his contributions to the automotive and space industries, hitting new milestones and leading the way. Recently, afellow billionaire shared his thoughts on the greatest contribution Musk has made to society.

What Happened: The recent test launch of Starship by SpaceX, which saw the record-breaking rocket successfully launch before blowing up in the air, has ignited a debate over whether the launch was a success or a failure for SpaceX and Musk.

While some have criticized Musk and SpaceX, Indian billionaire Anand Mahindra expressed admirationfor Musk in a tweet.

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The most significant contribution to business by Elon Musk will not be Tesla or SpaceX but his unwavering attitude towards risk. Most people would be permanently discouraged by such a failure. However, by treating each initiative as a learning experiment (and having the resources to do so), you essentially expand the boundaries of knowledge and progress, Mahindra tweeted.

The comments from the Mahindra Group Chairman come as Musk and SpaceX were already excited to get back to work on preparing for the next rocket launch.

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Why Its Important: The narrative surrounding Musk encompasses his roles as an investor, entrepreneur, and a visionary with an optimistic outlook.

Musk has shared over the years stories of how Tesla and SpaceX were both close to bankruptcy. Now the companies are worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

Perhaps more importantly, both Tesla and SpaceX have revolutionized their respective sectors, which came from Musk being able to recognize risk andovercome adversity.

If Musk stopped after the first failure for Tesla or SpaceX, neither company would be around today.

In the realm of the space industry, SpaceX experienced multiple setbacks before achieving a historic milestone with the first reusable rocket. Thanks to the technology developed after numerous failures, the expenses associated with space exploration and sending cargo into space have been substantially reduced.

Read Next: Donald Trump Praises Elon Musk With One Word Answer, Remains Critical Of Electric Vehicles

Photo:British High Commissionon flickr and Shuttertsock

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Not Tesla Or SpaceX: Here's Elon Musk's Greatest Contribution To Society, Says Indian Billionaire - Benzinga