SpaceX to launch Bandwagon-2 rideshare from Vandenberg
Date:
Fri, 20 Dec 2024 22:44:37 +0000
Description:
On Saturday, Dec. 21st, SpaceX will launch the Bandwagon-2 rideshare mission  from Space Launch Complex The post SpaceX to launch Bandwagon-2 rideshare 
from Vandenberg appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
On Saturday, Dec. 21st, SpaceX will launch the Bandwagon-2 rideshare mission  from Space Launch Complex 4E at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.  Liftoff is scheduled for 3:34 AM PST (11:34 UTC), with another opportunity 
the next day at 3:12 AM PST if the launch should be delayed. 
This flight carries 30 payloads for a variety of customers, including a  synthetic aperture radar satellite for South Korea. The spacecraft are 
heading for a 45-degree inclination, with deployments expected in circular  orbits at around 510 and 570 kilometers in altitude. 
 
SpaceX has switched coasts for Bandwagon-2 after launching the first 
Bandwagon flight in April from Florida. The Transporter rideshare missions to  polar orbits were also moved to Vandenberg Space Force Base (VSFB) after  flying six missions from Florida. The 45.4-degree orbit that Bandwagon-2 is  targeting has an unusually low inclination for a launch from Vandenberg,  although SpaceX has previously flown Starlink missions from the site going to  orbits inclined as little as 43 degrees. 
The Falcon 9 booster used for this flight is B1071-21 , which previously flew  NROL-87, NROL-85, SARah-1, SWOT, Transporter-8, Transporter-9, NROL-146, and  13 Starlink missions. SpaceX support ship GO Beyond will recover the payload  fairing halves from downrange in the Pacific Ocean. Launch of the previous  Bandwagon mission, Bandwagon-1, in April 2024 (Credit: Julia Bergeron for 
NSF) 
For this mission, the boosters main engines will cut off at T+2 minutes, 15  seconds. At this point in the flight Falcon 9s first and second stages  separate before the booster flips around to perform a boostback burn that 
puts it on a trajectory back to Landing Zone 4 (LZ-4), adjacent to its launch  pad at VSFB. Landing of the booster is expected at T+8 minutes, 15 seconds. 
The second stage of the launch vehicle will perform several burns to release  most of the payloads at 510 km, then the South Korean satellite at 570 km in  altitude, before deorbiting. See Also Bandwagon-2 Updates SpaceX Missions  Section L2 SpaceX Section Click here to Join L2 
Bandwagon-2 is scheduled for launch less than eight hours after a mission for  Astranis is due to lift off from Florida, making it SpaceXs 131st Falcon  mission of 2024, with five more scheduled for the remainder of December. 
After having a slower third quarter with only 27 launches, this is already 
the 39th in the fourth quarter of the year. The next SpaceX flight is 
expected to carry Starlink satellites early Monday morning from Kennedy Space  Center in Florida. The next rideshare flight will be Transporter 12 in 
January to Sun-synchronous orbit (SSO). 
 Mission Overview 
Bandwagon-2 is SpaceXs second dedicated rideshare flight to a mid-inclination  orbit, which keeps the satellites over more highly populated areas of the  planet rather than providing the full global coverage of near-polar orbits  targeted by Transporter missions. The first four Bandwagon missions are  expected to each carry a South Korean earth observation satellite at the top  of the payload stack. 
As with the Transporter flights, payload integration companies handle many of  the satellites going onto the stack. For this flight, Exolaunch is supporting  15 CubeSats and 7 larger microsatellites. (CubeSat sizes are typically given  in terms of 10 cm cubes, with a 6U CubeSat being approximately 30 x 20 x 10  cm.) Maverick Space is also involved, while Arrow Science and Technology has 
a 16U CubeSat deployer on board, although no details of its contents have 
been announced prior to launch. Render of SAR satellite for 425 Project.  (Credit: Thales Alenia Space) 
In December 2023, SpaceX launched the first of five satellites for South  Koreas 425 Project, a constellation of military Earth observation satellites.  While that first satellite, which was declared operational in August, had an  optical imaging payload, the remaining four use synthetic aperture radar  (SAR). These radar satellites are able to obtain images in darkness or 
through clouds, complementing the abilities of optical imaging spacecraft. 
Thales Alenia Space announced in December 2018 that it had signed two  contracts with Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) and Hansha Systems 
Corporation to develop high-resolution SAR satellites for Koreas Agency for  Defence Development. Thales Alenia is providing the radar-imaging payloads 
and elements of the system for pointing the spacecraft. The SAR payload uses 
a deployable 5-meter antenna. 
Bandwagon-2 is carrying the second of the 425 Project SAR satellites. This  follows the programs first SAR satellite, which was deployed during  Bandwagon-1 earlier this year, with the next of these satellites expected to  be aboard Bandwagon-3. 
 Other expected payloads 
Other payloads aboard the Bandwagon-2 mission include the X47 and X49  satellites, each with a mass around 90 kg, to expand ICEYEs SAR imaging  constellation, joining those launched on previous rideshares. ICEYE recently  announced a new funding round that brought its total amount raised in 2024 to  $158 million. HawkEye 360 satellites use a variety of antennas to monitor  different frequency ranges. Credit: Hawkeye 360 
Hawkeye 360 has Cluster-11, a trio of microsatellites each with a mass of 30  kg, aboard the rocket. These will fly in formation to locate the source of  radio-frequency (RF) transmissions on Earth. Tomorrow.io has Tomorrow-S3 and  S4 aboard, a pair of 6U CubeSats with microwave sounder payloads to collect  weather data. 
Sidus Space is launching its second mission, LizzieSat-2, which has a mass of  approximately 100 kg. This spacecraft hosts instruments such as imagers and  edge computing, including HEOs Holmes-004 imager that will be used to observe  other objects in orbit. 
True Anomalys 275-kg Jackal 3/TAANSAAFL-002 mission will demonstrate  rendezvous and proximity operations (RPO) and non-Earth imaging (NEI)  functions. True Anomalys first pair of satellites, launched on Transporter 10  in March, failed shortly after deployment. 
GITAI has SC1, a 16U CubeSat, which will test a new spacecraft bus and  instrument suite. SC1 with deploy a tethered target and then observe it with  cameras, LiDAR, and a laser rangefinder, processing the data with visual  recognition software. 
Think Orbitals Flight-2 will conduct a demonstration of electron beam 
welding, cutting, and x-ray inspection on a piece of metal, then transmit the  resulting data back to Earth and shut down within about a day of launch. This  is the companys first free-flying orbital mission, using a 39-kg satellite,  following up on an earlier demonstrator that stayed attached to a Falcon 9  first stage. 
Xplores 6U CubeSat XCUBE-1 (6U) is the first mission for its operator,  carrying a hyperspectral imager. Djiboutis second satellite, DJIBOUTI-B, is a  1U CubeSat with an Internet of Things (IoT) communications payload to gather  data from climatological stations in the country. 
Space Telecommunications Inc. (STI) has an 8U CubeSat, CTC-0, aboard which  will test direct-to-device communications and blockchain technologies.  CroCube, a 1U CubeSat, is a demonstration mission with a camera and a  microcontroller payload and will be Croatias first CubeSat mission. LASARSat.  Credit: Karel Hork 
LASARSat, also a 1U CubeSat, is a Czech mission that includes sensors for  detecting how much energy reaches the satellite from a laser passing through  Earths atmosphere, as well as reflectors to aid in tracking. 
Pleiades-Orpheus, a CubeSat from the Irvington High School Girls in STEM 
Club! using the 1U platform developed by Cal-Poly Pomona, has an amateur 
radio payload. 
Mongolias ONDO Space has ONDOSAT-OWL-3 through 12, ten more of their 0.5U  CubeSats for IoT communications. 
More payload information will be added as it becomes available. 
 Notes on previous SpaceX rideshare missions 
 Transporter-11: 113 objects are being tracked from this launch, with 12 of  those still unidentified on Celestrak. Based on the expected payloads those 
12 could be CAKRA-1, GNA-3, one of the Doves from Planet, and the nine  PICo-IoT satellites. 
 Bandwagon-1: All 11 expected objects are tracked and identified. 
 Transporter-10: 51 objects are being tracked from this launch, with 13 of  those still unidentified on Space-Track. 
 SSO-A: Launched in December 2018, this rideshare organized by Spaceflight  Inc. left two sizeable pieces of the payload stack in orbit. While the Upper  Free Flyer is still at an altitude of approximately 560 x 540 km, the Lower  Free Flyer reentered Earths atmosphere in early December. The Transporter-1  payload adapter is also still in orbit at 480 x 470 km. Later flights kept 
the rideshare stack attached to the second stage. 
 (Lead image: Falcon 9 on the pad at Vandenberg before SDA Tranche 0 Flight 1  launch. Credit: Jack Beyer for NSF) 
 
The post SpaceX to launch Bandwagon-2 rideshare from Vandenberg appeared 
first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2024/12/bandwagon-2/
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