Launch Roundup: New Glenn set for maiden flight, Falcon 9 missions end and  start the year
Date:
Mon, 30 Dec 2024 21:40:10 +0000
Description:
Following an exceptionally busy December, this week starts the new year with  only three scheduled The post Launch Roundup: New Glenn set for maiden 
flight, Falcon 9 missions end and start the year appeared first on  NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
Following an exceptionally busy December, this week starts the new year with  only three scheduled missions, with the possibility of two flights of heavy  launch vehicles within the first ten days of January. Four days before  Starships seventh flight, Blue Origins New Glenn is expected to take its  maiden voyage from Florida. This highly anticipated debut launch will also  include an attempt to propulsively land the first stage booster at sea on a  sea platform. 
The Indian Space Research Organisations (ISRO) SPADEX mission closed 2024 
with a record 259 orbital missions, placing 25 crew and over 2,700 payloads  into orbit and across the solar system. SpaceXs Falcon 9 carried over 2,300  payloads (85%), including over 1,900 Starlink satellites. 
 
Launch sites in the U.S. and China accounted for 80% of the years orbital  launch traffic, with 54% and 26% of the share, respectively. An anomaly on 
the final launch of a Lijian-1 rocket from Jiuquan on Dec. 27 denied China a  record number of successful launches. As a result, China matched its 2023  total of 65 successful orbital missions despite launching two more missions 
in 2024. Russia continued to decline by two launches per year, closing 2024  with 17 flights. While India dropped to just five missions in 2024, it is  expected to ramp up flights in 2025 as it pushes forward with its Gaganyaan  program. 
Europe matched last years three orbital missions from its spaceport in French  Guiana but is also planning to increase its launch cadence in 2025. The final  quarter of the year was significantly more active globally, with a record 14  launches inside seven days in November and 30 orbital launch attempts in  December, averaging almost one launch per day! 
Rocket Lab broke its launch record with 16 missions launched in 2024  a 60%  increase on the previous year, all successful. SpaceX finished the year with  134 orbital launches, again breaking its annual cadence record. SpaceXs 134  launches are only two launches shy of the companys revised goal of 136  following the flight delays caused in the summer by the failure of Starlink  9-3 and the failed landing of booster B1062. SpaceX reached its 400th orbital  launch in October, followed by its 400th Falcon 9 flight in November. This  coming year will see the company reach and exceed 25 flights by a  flight-proven booster and, in the coming weeks, the 400th successful landing  and recovery of a Falcon vehicle first stage. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 12-6 
In the last scheduled launch of 2024, a Falcon 9 will launch another batch of  21 Starlink v2-Mini satellites into low-Earth orbit (LEO) on Tuesday, Dec. 
31, at 12:34 AM EST (05:34 UTC). Falcon 9 will launch from Launch Complex 39A  (LC-39A) at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida and fly southeast, passing  northeast of the Bahamas. 
The 16,000 kg payload of satellites, reflecting the companys first launch in  2024, includes 13 of the direct-to-cell variants. SpaceX recently completed  the first phase of its direct-to-cell service and continues to build out the  constellation. 
Falcon 9 booster B1078 is supporting this mission on its 16th flight.  Approximately eight minutes into the mission, B1078 will land ~600 km  downrange on the autonomous droneship Just Read The Instructions . B1078 has  previously flown 11 other Starlink missions in addition to satellites for the  03b mPOWER and Bluebird constellations. The booster has been active since  March 2023, when it first carried the Crew-6 mission to the International  Space Station. It has made landings on two SpaceX droneships and both 
concrete pads at Landing Zone 1 (LZ-1) and Landing Zone 2 (LZ-2), the latter  following the launch of USSF-124 for the United States Space Force. 
This will be the 132nd Falcon 9 launch of 2024 and the 134th launch of the  year for SpaceX. Render of the Thuraya 4-NG satellite in orbit. (Credit:  Thuraya Communications Company) 
 Falcon 9 | Thuraya 4-NGS 
SpaceXs first mission of 2025 will launch from Space Launch Complex 40  (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS) in Florida. The  launch window for this mission opens on Thursday, Jan. 2, at 12:00 AM EST  (05:00 UTC) and lasts nearly two hours. 
Falcon 9 will carry the Thuraya 4-NGS communication satellite, massing 5,000  kg, into a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO). Airbus Defence and Space built  the satellite for Thuraya Telecommunications using Airbus all-electric  Eurostar-Neo platform. With a large 12 m L-band antenna, the satellite can  apply dynamic power allocation across many spot beams, with advanced routing  flexibility of up to 3,200 channels. The satellite is part of Thurayas  transformational program, which includes its satellite and ground  infrastructure. The beams, channel size, and bandwidth are reconfigurable  while in orbit, supporting hotspot surges and offering users a wide range of  data rates above one megabit per second. The satellite will service users in  Europe, Africa, Central Asia, and the Middle East, as well as vast stretches  of the Atlantic and the Indian Oceans. 
The booster supporting this mission is not yet confirmed but is expected to  land on an autonomous droneship downrange to the east in the Atlantic Ocean.  Static fire of New Glenn on Dec. 27. (Credit: Blue Origin) 
 New Glenn | Maiden Flight 
Following a successful 24-second static fire of a full integrated stack for  the first time on Dec. 27, Blue Origin is set to debut its New Glenn  heavy-lift launcher on Monday, Jan. 6, at 01:00 EST (06:00 UTC) from Launch  Complex 36 (LC-36) at the CCSFS in Florida. New Glenn has been in design and  development for well over a decade. It is named after NASA astronaut John  Glenn, the first American to reach orbit 62 years ago in February 1962 on the  Friendship 7 mission. 
In addition to flying on its maiden launch, the GS1-SN001 first stage 
booster, playfully named So Youre Telling Me Theres a Chance , will attempt 
to land on the companys recovery vessel Jacklyn , which will be stationed  downrange in the Atlantic. This will mark the companys first propulsive  landing of an orbital class booster and the first recovery attempt on Jacklyn  . 
The two-stage New Glenn rocket stands 98 m tall and seven meters in diameter.  Seven of the companys BE-4 engines will power the first stage, giving it a  thrust of 17,150 kN at liftoff. These same engines are used on the first 
stage of the United Launch Alliances (ULA) Vulcan Centaur rocket and use  liquid methane and liquid oxygen as propellants. New Glenn can carry 45,000 
kg to LEO or 13,000 kg to GTO. The rocket was originally expected to carry  NASAs Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers (ESCAPADE) 
mission on its maiden launch, injecting two spacecraft on a direct  interplanetary trajectory to study Mars magnetosphere. This mission has since  been rescheduled to this spring and will now be launched as New Glenns third  mission. 
 
In its place is DarkSky-1, a prototype pathfinder of Blue Origins Blue Ring  spacecraft. This multi-mission capable space mobility platform will be able 
to deliver 3,000 kg of payloads to various orbits, including cislunar and  interplanetary space. This demonstration will last around six hours and  validate Blue Rings core systems, including orbit-to-ground communications,  telemetry, and radiometric tracking used on the production vehicle. 
Amongst the many milestone firsts associated with this flight, it will also  act as Blue Origins first certification flight for the U.S. governments  National Security Space Launch (NSSL) program. A second NSSL demonstration  flight is expected in March when New Glenn will carry a prototype of the Blue  Moon lunar lander  the first of two planned pathfinder missions carrying  landers in 2025. New Glenn will also loft at least one batch of Kuiper  satellites for Amazons Project Kuiper internet constellation, for which it is  contracted to carry 12 missions. 
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued Blue Origin a five-year Part  450 launch license from the Cape just hours before the static fire. The  company expects to increase New Glenns launch cadence to eight launches per  year, introducing dual-manifesting after the rockets initial missions. 
 (Lead Image: New Glenn stands ready atop LC-36. Credit: Blue Origin) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: New Glenn set for maiden flight, Falcon 9 missions  end and start the year appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2024/12/launch-roundup-123024/
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