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Communications Space

SpaceX Re-Schedules Record-Breaking Launch With 143 Satellites to Sunday (arstechnica.com) 82

Ars Technica reported Saturday that "The Falcon 9 rocket was ready. Its payload of 143 satellites were ready. But Mother Nature was not ready."

Although SpaceX pressed ahead with fueling of the Falcon 9 booster on Saturday morning, the company scrubbed the launch attempt of the Transporter-1 mission a few minutes before the window opened due to weather. Conditions at Cape Canaveral violated the electrical field rule for a safe launch. The company now plans to try to launch again on Sunday morning, with the launch window opening at 10am ET (15:00 UTC).
Slashdot noted earlier that SpaceX plans to launch the most satellites ever deployed in a single mission, 143, from Florida for more than a dozen customers. UPI reports: A 2017 mission by the India Space Research Organization launched 104 spacecraft, which would be the previous record if the SpaceX launch is a success... The Transporter-1 mission is the first in a series of regularly scheduled SpaceX rideshare projects for multiple customers. SpaceX also plans to carry 10 of its Starlink communications satellites on this mission.

"The Starlink satellites aboard this mission will be the first in the constellation to deploy to a polar orbit," according to the SpaceX mission description. Polar orbits circle the globe by passing over the North Pole and South Pole, while many satellites circle above equatorial regions. Houston-based space firm Nanoracks is acting as a broker to arrange some customers for the launch, said Tristan Prejean, a mission manager at Nanoracks. Nanoracks' two customers for Transporter-1 are two satellite companies, California-based Spire Global and Montreal-based GHGSat. Spire launches fleets of small satellites that monitor weather and patterns for shipping for aviation interests. GHGSat monitors industrial emissions of gasses from space -- especially greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change.

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SpaceX Re-Schedules Record-Breaking Launch With 143 Satellites to Sunday

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  • So they have the removal included in the cost and business plan?

    Because otherwise, this will be abandoned in a few years, when they are at their end of life, outdated, or the business running them is outsourced, bought out, and sucked dry with a controlled bankruptcy, by a hedge fund.
    Dumping the actual removal cost on us. As always.

    • They are in a 525km high orbit, and small satellites have more drag, so they'll all deorbit relatively quickly.
    • Yes, it's called gravity. Starlink satellites will be in LEO (more specifically, at an altitude of 500 km [wikipedia.org]). SpaceX plans are to deorbit them when they go EOL, so the "years" time only applies if the satellite dies before it can be deorbited. Each satellite weighs about 260kg, so 12,000 satellites is about 3,120 tonnes. To put that into perspective, 15,000 tonnes [wikipedia.org] of meteoroids enter the atmosphere every year. However StarLink satellites will have a life expectancy of about 4 years [citation needed], so they

    • Dumping the actual removal cost on us.

      Lots of zeroes raining down on your head and possibly a little ash.

  • Just keep tossing junk in the sky and eventually we won't have to worry about global warming.

    Yes the sky and space are vast, but humans always find a way of filling open spaces with junk. Just look between our ears.
    • Can't speak to any other nation

      But if the telcos in the USA had spent the money we gave them like they promised (building out the last mile) then we wouldn't even need this shit

      P.S. It was hundreds of billions of dollars

      • But if the telcos in the USA had spent the money we gave them like they promised (building out the last mile) then we wouldn't even need this shit

        The part you really arent going to like is that they did build it out. The money was given to them when 1Mbit was an extremely fast home connection (the fastest most would have had access to before the funding was ISDN, while most people ran 56K modems or slower), and DSL being DSL, the telcos that built out couldnt compete with the cablecos that built out.

        The cableco's at the time frequently advertised as "@HOME" as part of that funding, and most of the cable broadband today is still running through the

        • The part you really arent going to like is that they did build it out.

          No, they didn't. They never managed to meet the requirements of the programs at the time. And frankly, they haven't even done what they claimed they would do at the time, either, and I don't know why you imagine that they did. Remember Pacific Bell? Yeah, way back before they were acquired by SBC, which was in turn acquired by ATT. They promised that they would have every subscriber wired up to DSL by 2000. They were bought out by ATT in 1997, but retained the Pacific Bell name until 2002. Neither Pac Bell

    • Just keep tossing junk in the sky and eventually we won't have to worry about global warming.

      I assume that this is intended to be satirical.

      It would take about a hundred trillion Starlink sized satellites to block out enough sunlight to make a significant amount of shade. If we're launching ten trillion satellites a year, I expect that the world will have changed a lot in other ways as well.

    • "Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space."

    • Hahahaha. .. Do you know how many cars are in the world? Nearly 1,500,000,000. That's 1.5 billion. Is the ground blotted out with cars? A car is way smaller than these satellites and there aren't any cars driving around in the ocean.

      Idiot.

      • I think you meant a car is way larger than these satellites.

        Each satellite is only ~260kg at launch. Cars are around 4X that, with average mass around 1 metric ton(1k kg). You're right, these satellites, on the scale of just about everything except maybe printer ink, are tiny.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Today's launch was scrubbed at around T-6 mins owing to the weather not cooperating.

    Another launch attempt is scheduled for tomorrow, Sun 24th Jan at 10am EDT / 1500 UTC.

  • A 2017 mission by the India Space Research Organization launched 104 spacecraft, which would be the previous record if the SpaceX launch is a success.

    Man, don't you just love the way UPI spins such a simple fact, and not even very successfully? Why wouldn't something like the following be preferrable?

    The current record is 104 spacecraft, which were launched by the India Space Research Organization in 2017.

    It's no wonder people worldwide are so mistrustful of the mainstream media's ability to "inform imp

  • In Soviet Russia, the Falcon 9 is not ready for Mother Nature
  • SpaceX could dramatically improve its cadence just by doing all launches from Boca Chica, not from the Cape.

    • > SpaceX could dramatically improve its cadence just by doing all launches from Boca Chica, not from the Cape.

      A launch mount for Superheavy is currently under construction there.

  • 143 Satellites to service a dozen customers? Fascinating.
    • by catprog ( 849688 )

      The customer being the owner of the satellites. Not the customers of them.

      I.e starlink missions only have 1 customer.

  • Stock prices of manufacturers of home telescopes continue to slide...

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