Launch Roundup: Kairos set for second launch attempt, Falcon 9 to launch 03b  and GPS missions
Date:
Mon, 09 Dec 2024 21:50:06 +0000
Description:
This week, Japanese commercial company Space One will make a second attempt 
to launch its The post Launch Roundup: Kairos set for second launch attempt,  Falcon 9 to launch 03b and GPS missions appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com  .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
This week, Japanese commercial company Space One will make a second attempt 
to launch its Kairos vehicle, while SpaceX has three Falcon 9 launches 
planned in less than 28 hours towards the end of the week. These include two  back-to-back customer missions on Friday, both from the east coast, carrying  satellites for the 03b mPOWER and GPS-III satellite constellations. 
This week opens with five launches on the schedule  half of the 11 total  orbital launches from an exceptionally busy week before. A record-breaking 14  rocket launches had taken place worldwide in the seven days leading to the  launch of a Simorgh rocket on Friday, Dec. 6. These included launches from 
the U.S., China, Russia, India, French Guiana, and Iran. Six launches were  originally expected to take place in one day, Dec. 4, two of which were  subsequently moved to later in the week. In total, there were 29 orbital  flights in November, averaging almost one per day, and the month closed with 
a record-breaking 229 orbital launches so far this year worldwide, beating  2023s record of 221. 
 
Adding to the milestones, SpaceX completed its 350th flight with a  flight-proven booster last week on the Starlink Group 9-14 mission. The  company also completed its first Direct-to-Cell constellation shell on this  mission, which consists of 24 planes, each containing 13 satellites at a  53-degree inclination at an operational altitude of 360 km. In the same week,  the company achieved the 100th successful landing on its droneship Just Read  The Instructions. Gushenxing-1 (Ceres-1) ahead of its previous launch at Site  95A of the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in June 2024. (Credit: Galactic  Energy) 
 Gushenxing-1 | Unknown payload 
This will be Galactic Energys fifth launch this year of its Gushenxing-1  rocket, also known as the Ceres-1, and the third of the year to launch from  Site 95A at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the Gansu Province of  China. 
This is the first vehicle to roll off the production line at the companys new  Ziyang Assembly and Manufacturing plant in the Sichuan Province, which will  increase the rockets production. To date, Galactic Energy has conducted 14  successful missions, launching 54 satellites for its customers, including  three sea-launched missions with the Ceres-1S variation of the rocket. 
Little is currently known about the payload onboard this particular mission.  The launch is expected to take place on Thursday, Dec. 12, at 07:20 UTC. The  four-stage Ceres-1 launch vehicle is 19 m tall with a mass of 33,000 kg and  burns solid propellant on the first three stages. The final stage uses  storable liquid hydrazine for propulsion. Up to 400 kg can be carried to a  low-Earth orbit or up to 300 kg to a Sun-synchronous orbit, which has been  more commonly targeted on recent missions. 22 Starlink satellites deployed  during the Starlink Group 10-8 mission from SLC-40. (Credit: SpaceX) 
 Falcon 9 Block 5 | Starlink Group 11-2 
This mission will send the second group of 22 Starlink v2-Mini satellites 
into Group 11 of the Starlink constellation, the first of which flew over 
four months ago at the start of August. Launch is scheduled for Thursday, Dec  12, at 1:33 PM PST (19:33 UTC), at the top of a typical four-hour launch  window, from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at the Vandenberg Space Force  Base in California. 
A Falcon 9 will fly on a southeasterly trajectory to place the satellites 
into an initial 273 by 283 km orbit, inclined 53 degrees. The first stage  booster has not yet been confirmed but is expected to land on the autonomous  droneship Of Course I Still Love You approximately eight minutes into the  mission. SpaceX launched 7,523 Starlink satellites, of which 6,031 have now  moved into their operational orbits (not including Group 11-2). Boeing  delivers the latest pair of 03b mPower satellites to SES. (Credit:  Boeing/Sally Aristei) 
 Falcon 9 Block 5 | 03b mPOWER 7 & 8 
SpaceX is launching the fourth pair of O3b mPOWER high-throughput and  low-latency internet satellites for operator SES this week. The launch is  scheduled for Friday, Dec. 13, at 3:55 PM EST (20:55 UTC) from Launch Complex  39A (LC-39A) at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, targeting a medium-Earth  orbit. This will be the first of two back-to-back missions with three hours 
of each other on Dec. 13. 
The 03b mPOWER system is already operational with six satellites in orbit 
and, following this mission, will launch another three satellites in 2025,  with a final pair launching in 2026. Boeing, who will now build two 
additional satellites beyond its original 11-satellite contract, transported  the satellites to the Cape last month from its build facilities in El 
Segundo, California. 
This pair of satellites will feature redesigned power modules, addressing the  electrical problems experienced on the first six satellites, impairing their  performance and delaying this mission. Each subsequent launch will strengthen  the existing constellation, which will have tripled in capacity once it has  grown to seven fully capable satellites, with the original six satellites  acting as spares. The satellites allow the operator, SES, to dynamically  allocate bandwidth and power to their customers as required, generating over  5,000 fully steerable beams. 
The booster supporting this mission has not been confirmed but is expected to  land on an autonomous droneship stationed approximately 600 km downrange to  the east of LC-39A. Render of the enhanced GPS IIIF satellite (Credit:  Lockheed Martin) 
 Falcon 9 Block 5 | GPS-3 10 
The launch of the GPS-3 10 mission will see the second Falcon 9 launch from  the east coast within three hours, following the 03b mPower mission from  LC-39A. This launch for the U.S. Space Force is planned to launch from  neighboring pad Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) on Friday, Dec. 13, at 6:30  PM EST (23:30 UTC). The satellite will be carried into a medium-Earth orbit,  building the third generation of the global positioning system (GPS). The  Navstar-3 program leverages technological advances to modernize the original  GPS system, which was first launched in 1978. GPS-3 improves positioning,  navigating, and timing services for civil and military users worldwide, with  increased resistance to jamming and spoofing through M-code security  algorithms. 
Built on Lockheed Martins A2100M satellite bus, each satellite carries eight  deployable antennas manufactured by Northrop Grumman. The GPS has been  operational for almost three decades, with six Block 3 satellites already in  service and another three ready for launch on Vulcan Centaur rockets next  year. This will be the sixth GPS Block 3 satellite to be launched on a Falcon  9 since the launch of the first nearly six years ago. 
The booster supporting this mission has not yet been confirmed, nor the  droneship on which it is expected to land. Render of Spaceport Kii with pad  and integration building. (Credit: Space One) 
 Kairos | Flight 2 
Following a troubled maiden launch attempt in March, Japanese commercial  launch company Space One is set to launch its Kairos rocket on Saturday, Dec.  14, at 02:00 UTC. Named after the Greek god of opportunity, the rockets 
second attempt has a 20-minute launch window to lift off from Spaceport Kii   the companys dedicated launch site in the Kii Peninsula within the Wakayama  Prefecture. This 15-hectare site includes a pad, tower, control center,  storage, and integration facilities, opening out to the sea at the  southernmost point of Japans main island of Honshu. 
The vehicle will target a Sun-synchronous orbit at 500 km altitude and is  expected to carry a 50 kg Tarara-1 micro-satellite alongside four cubesats  measuring 3U each, built by high school students in partnership with Terra  Space. The primary satellite includes the first Buddha statue to launch into  orbit, enshrined at the top of what has been dubbed the Kounji (Space) 
Temple. Following deployment at around 55 minutes into the mission at an  altitude of 500 km, the upper stage will perform a retrograde burn to deorbit  itself. 
 
The first flight of the Kairos small satellite launcher was also the first  launch from Space Ones launch facility and was planned to be the countrys  first orbital launch from the private sector. The vehicle experienced a rapid  unscheduled disassembly just seconds into the flight at an altitude of less  than 100 m when a lower-than-expected rate of thrust triggered the rockets  automatic termination system. 
The Kairos vehicle is similar in size to Rocket Labs Electron, standing 18 m  tall with a diameter of 1.5 m. Massing 23,000 kg, it is capable of carrying  250 kg to LEO or 150 kg to a Sun-synchronous orbit at 500 km. The first three  stages are solid-fuelled, using motors developed by IHI Aerospace, an 
investor in Space One, which have also been used on JAXAs Epsilon rocket. A  fourth upper kick stage is liquid-fuelled. Space One plans to build its 
launch cadence to a level greater than the Japan Aerospace Exploration 
Agencys (JAXA), with intentions to increase to 20 launches per year before 
the end of the decade. 
 (Lead image: Streak as Falcon 9 launches Starlink Group 12-5 mission from  SLC-40 at CCSFS on Sunday, Dec. 8. Credit: SpaceX) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: Kairos set for second launch attempt, Falcon 9 to  launch 03b and GPS missions appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2024/12/launch-roundup-120924/
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