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SpaceX will launch its
1st Starlink satellites of 2021 on Wednesday. Here's how to watch.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — SpaceX will launch
its first batch of Starlink satellites in 2021 on Monday (Jan. 18) to expand the
company's growing megaconstellation and you can watch the action live
online.
The Hawthorne, California-based company
will loft 60 Starlink internet satellites on its workhorse Falcon 9 rocket from
NASA's historic Pad 39A here at Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 8:45 a.m. EDT
(1422 GMT).
You can watch the launch live here and on
the Space.com homepage, courtesy of SpaceX, beginning about 15 minutes before
liftoff. You can also watch the launch directly via SpaceX.
SpaceX already has one launch under its
belt this year and is looking to ramp up the pace. 2020 was a banner year for
the private spaceflight company, which included two different astronaut missions
to the International Space Station — the first for a commercial
company.
It was also the company's busiest launch
year to date, with a record 26 flights, smashing the previous record of 18 set
in 2018. This year SpaceX has even bigger ambitions, as the company plans to
launch 40 rockets between its California and Florida launch sites.
Following liftoff on Monday, the Falcon 9's
first stage is expected to land on SpaceX's drone ship, "Just Read the
Instructions" in the Atlantic Ocean. (SpaceX’s main drone ship, "Of Course I
Still Love You," is undergoing maintenance before it returns to service
following a busy year.) If successful, the landing will mark the 72nd recovery
of a first stage booster for the California-based rocket
manufacturer.
The rocket featured in this launch will be
another record-setting booster. Known as B1051, this flight proven booster will
embark on its eighth flight — the first of SpaceX's fleet to do so. It will also
mark one of SpaceX's shortest turnaround times between flights as this
particular last flew just over a month ago.
To date, B1051 has carried an assortment of
payloads, including an uncrewed Crew Dragon spacecraft to the International
Space Station as part of a 2019 flight test, followed by a trio of
Earth-observing satellites for Canada as well as four different Starlink
missions. Most recently, it carried a 15,432-lb. (7,000 kilograms) satellite
into orbit for Sirius XM, that will beam down content to Sirius subscribers
across the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean.
SpaceX created its Starlink internet
program to connect users around the globe and provide reliable and affordable
internet service, mainly to remote and rural areas. By using a small terminal
(no larger than a laptop), users on the ground will be able to connect to the
ever-growing network. SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk has said that the company
needs to launch between 500 and 800 satellites in order to begin rolling out
service.
To date, SpaceX has launched more than
1,000 of the internet-beaming satellites into orbit, in an effort to fill out
its planned initial constellation of 1,440 spacecraft. SpaceX has already begun
beta-testing its space-based internet service, and the initial testing phase has
shown that the service is reliable.
The phase is going so well that SpaceX has
even started to offer users in the U.K. to help in the beta-testing. The company
received a license to start operating in the U.K. last year, thanks to local
telecoms regulator Ofcom.
Flight milestones
Monday's launch marks the 102nd flight
overall for SpaceX’s workhorse two-stage Falcon 9 rocket, as well as the 51st
reflight of a Falcon 9 rocket since the company began recovering boosters in
2015.
Over the past five years, the company has
honed its recovery efforts, while continuing to prove Falcon 9’s reliability.
Flying previously flown boosters has now become commonplace for SpaceX, and has
allowed the company to launch its rockets at a record pace.
To date, SpaceX has successfully landed its
first-stage boosters 71 times. Now that the company has two fully operational
drone-ship landing platforms — "Of Course I Still Love You" and "Just Read the
Instructions" — in Florida, it’s able to launch (and land) more rockets. The
newer drone ship on the block, "Just Read the Instructions," is already at the
recovery zone waiting for its turn to catch B1051 when it returns to Earth on
Monday.
SpaceX is expected to continue its
tradition of recovering the Falcon 9's payload fairing, or nose cone, on this
flight. The company has two net-equipped boats — called GO Ms. Tree and GO Ms.
Chief — that it uses to snag the fairings as they fall back to Earth in two
pieces.
Each piece of the clamshell-like hardware,
which cost approximately $6 million combined, is outfitted with software that
navigates it to the recovery zone, and a parachute system that lets them gently
land in the ocean or the outstretched net of GO Ms. Tree and GO Ms.
Chief.
The boats are also able to scoop the
fairings up out of the water as making a midair catch is tricky and dependent
upon several factors, like weather and winds. Typically the team decides whether
it will catch or scoop the day of launch. And those recovery efforts take place
roughly 45 minutes after liftoff.
Currently, weather is 70% go for the launch
opportunity on Monday, with the only weather concerns being the potential for
cumulus clouds over the launch site. There is a backup launch time on Tuesday if
need be. The launch weather that day looks even better, with a 90% chance of
favorable launch conditions.
If everything goes as planned, this could
mark the first of two SpaceX launches from Florida this week. The Hawthorne,
California based company is planning to launch a rideshare mission on Thursday
(Jan. 21). And could cap off the month with another Starlink mission.
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