SpaceX
launches 60 more Starlink satellites and achieves a reusability record for a
Falcon 9 booster
SpaceX launched its second Falcon 9 rocket in the span of just four days on
Wednesday at 9:25 PM EDT (6:25 PM PDT). This one was carrying 60 more
satellites for its Starlink constellation, which will bring the total currently
in operation on orbit to 480. The launch took off from Florida, where SpaceX
launched astronauts for the first time ever on Saturday for the final
demonstration mission of its Crew Dragon to fulfill the requirements of NASA's
Commercial Crew human-rating process.
Today's launch didn't include any human passengers, but it did fly that next
big batch of Starlink broadband internet satellites, as mentioned. Those will
join the other Starlink satellites in low Earth orbit, forming part of a
network that will eventually serve to provide high-bandwidth, reliable internet
connectivity, particularly in underserved areas where terrestrial networks
either aren't present or don't offer high-speed connections.
This launch included a test of a new system that SpaceX designed in order to
hopefully improve an issue its satellites have had with nighttime visibility
from Earth. The test Starlink satellite, one of the 60, has a visor system
installed that it can deploy post-launch in order to block the sun from
reflecting off of its communication antenna surfaces. If it works as designed,
it should greatly reduce sunlight reflected off of the satellite back to Earth,
and SpaceX will then look to make it a standard part of its Starlink satellite
design going forward.
Part of this launch included landing the first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket
used for the launch, which has already flown previously four times and been
recovered - that makes this a rocket that has now flown five missions, and
today it touched down safely once again on SpaceX's drone landing barge in the
ocean so it can potentially be used again.
SpaceX will also be attempting to recover the two fairing halves that form the
protective nose cone used during launch at the top of the rocket to protect the
payload being carried by the Falcon 9. We'll provide an update about how that
attempt goes once SpaceX provides details.
Tomorrow, June 4, actually marks the 10-year anniversary of the first flight of
a Falcon 9 rocket - between this reusability record, and the much more historic
first human spaceflight mission earlier this week, that's quite the decade.
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