Starlink launch concludes record-breaking 2024
Date:
Tue, 31 Dec 2024 20:39:14 +0000
Description:
With SpaceXs successful launch of the Starlink Group 12-6 mission on Tuesday,  the curtain came The post Starlink launch concludes record-breaking 2024  appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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With SpaceXs successful launch of the Starlink Group 12-6 mission on Tuesday,  the curtain came down on a year that has seen a record 259 orbital launches  from around the world. This has continued a trend over the last few years of  ever-increasing numbers of launches driven by SpaceXs Falcon 9 launch cadence  and increased activity in Chinas commercial space sector. 
2024 saw the retirement of United Launch Alliances Delta IV rocket and the  original version of Arianespaces Vega, along with the maiden flights of  several new rockets including Ariane 6, ULAs next-generation Vulcan, and  Chinas Chang Zheng 12. 
 
The increase in the number of orbital launches taking place worldwide has 
been dramatic and abrupt, with 2024s total more than double that seen in 2019  and 2020 when the current rise began. Despite the high number of launches,  only five failed to reach orbit with a sixth launch failing after reaching  orbit, and two partial failures. 
There were nine crewed orbital missions launched in 2024, with SpaceXs Dragon  flying two Commercial Crew missions to the International Space Station for  NASA and another visit to the outpost for the commercial Axiom-3 mission .  Dragon also flew the free-flying Polaris Dawn mission, during which Jared  Isaacman and Sarah Gillis became the first commercial astronauts to perform a  spacewalk. 
Boeings Starliner capsule flew its first crewed mission but helium leaks  affecting its thrusters left NASA without confidence that it would be able to  return its crew safely to Earth. After weeks of troubleshooting, the  spacecraft returned to Earth without its astronauts , who are remaining 
aboard the ISS until Dragons Crew 9 mission returns home next year. 
Two Russian Soyuz missions were also flown to the Space Station, while China  carried out two Shenzhou missions to rotate crew aboard its Tiangong Space  Station. 
 
2024 was a busy year for Lunar exploration, with four missions attempting to  land on the Moon. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) successfully  landed its Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (SLIM) in January, and the  following month Intuitive Machines Nova-C spacecraft became the first  commercial lander to reach the Moon successfully as part of the IM-1 mission 
. Both of these landers came to rest at unplanned orientations, with SLIM  nosing over and IM-1 falling onto its side, despite which they were able to  complete their planned objectives. Chinas Change-6 became the first mission 
to return samples from the far side, however, Astrobotics Peregrine lander  encountered problems shortly after launch and did not reach the Moon. 
NASAs Europa Clipper mission lifted off to begin its journey to Jupiter, with  ESAs Hera also starting its mission to the asteroid Didymos. On Mars,  Ingenuitys mission  which had already far exceeded its planned objectives   came to an end after its 72nd flight as a result of damage to the helicopters  rotor blades. In December, the Parker Solar Probe made its closest approach 
to the Sun. 
 United States 
For the third consecutive year, the United States carried out the most 
orbital launches of any country, with 154 rockets lifting off  including U.S.  company Rocket Labs operations from New Zealand. SpaceX has been leading this  charge with its Falcon 9 rocket , which flew more orbital missions in 2024  than all other rockets worldwide combined. 
A total of 132 Falcon 9 and two Falcon Heavy missions were launched, with 
many of the Falcon 9 launches dedicated to deploying SpaceXs Starlink  communications satellites . Others carried a wide array of payloads to orbit  including four Crew Dragon missions: Crew-8, Crew-9, Axiom 3, and Polaris  Dawn. Two uncrewed Dragon missions, CRS-30 and CRS-31, carried cargo to the  International Space Station, while Falcon 9 also launched a pair of Cygnus  resupply missions to the ISS on behalf of Northrop Grumman. 
July saw a Starlink launch reach a lower-than-planned orbit after the  premature cutoff of the second stage engine. This was the first in-flight  failure for a Falcon 9 mission in nine years and over 300 missions, since the  loss of the CRS-7 Dragon mission in June 2015. 
 Falcon Heavy launched the GOES-U (GOES 19) weather satellite for the 
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Europa Clipper  mission for NASA . SpaceX has also passed key milestones with Starship  development and testing , flying four near-orbital tests from Starbase in 
Boca Chica. These included the first successful catch of the Super Heavy  booster using the launch towers chopsticks during Flight 5 in October, and  on-target water landings in the Indian Ocean during Flight 5 and the  subsequent Flight 6 in November for the Ship itself. 
 
SpaceXs launch cadence shows no sign of abating and 2025 is likely to be even  busier than 2024, with the companys first launch of the year expected to be 
of the Thuraya 4-NGS communications satellite on Jan. 2. Starship Flight 7 is  also currently scheduled for the first half of January. 
 Rocket Lab accounted for the second-most launches among U.S. operators in  2024, with its Electron rocket flying 14 orbital missions. Thirteen of these  were carried out from the companys launch facility on the Mahia Peninsula in  New Zealand, with one from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport in Wallops  Island, Virginia. Two suborbital launches of a variant, Hypersonic 
Accelerator Suborbital Test Electron (HASTE), were also flown from Wallops  Island. 
2024 was a significant year for United Launch Alliance (ULA) , which made 
five launches over the course of the year. The first of these was the maiden  flight of the companys next-generation Vulcan rocket , which flew on Jan. 8  with Astrobotics Peregrine 1 Lunar lander aboard. This was deployed  successfully, although the spacecraft subsequently malfunctioned and was  unable to complete its mission. Vulcan completed a second successful test  flight in October with a dummy payload , reaching its planned orbit despite 
an issue with the nozzle of one of its solid rocket boosters during ascent. 
April saw the retirement of ULAs Delta IV Heavy, with its final launch  carrying out the NROL-70 mission for the National Reconnaissance Office. 
In June, ULA conducted its first human spaceflight launch, an Atlas V  deploying Boeings Starliner spacecraft for its Crew Flight Test (CFT) mission  with astronauts Barry E. Wilmore and Sunita Williams aboard for what was  intended to be a short visit to the ISS to test the spacecraft ahead of 
future Commercial Crew flights. Despite a successful launch the mission later  ran into problems and Starliner eventually returned to Earth without its 
crew, who remain aboard the Space Station and will return with SpaceXs Crew 9  mission next year. 
As well as being its first crewed launch, the Starliner mission also marked  the 100th flight of the Atlas V. Another Atlas launch in July deployed the  USSF-51 payload for the US Space Force , in the rockets last national 
security mission. ULA is winding down production of the Atlas V, which will 
be phased out in favor of Vulcan over the next few years. Vulcan on its 
launch pad ahead of the Cert-2 mission. (Credit: Max Evans for NSF) 
With Vulcans certification flights now complete, 2025 will see it begin 
flying operational missions as ULA steps up its transition to the new rocket.  At least two Atlas V missions are also planned, one with the ViaSat 3.2  communications satellite, and another to begin deployment of Amazons Kuiper  broadband constellation. 
The only other U.S. launcher to fly in 2024 was Fireflys Alpha vehicle, whose  Noise of Summer mission in July deployed a cluster of small satellites in a  demonstration mission for NASA. This was carried out successfully, marking  Fireflys return to flight after an anomaly on its previous mission at the end  of 2023. 
 Blue Origin resumed crewed suborbital flights with its New Shepard rocket ,  which had been suspended since the rocket failed during an uncrewed science  launch in 2022. Three missions, each with a crew of six, were flown. In  October an uncrewed launch was made using a new booster and capsule, RSS Krmn  Line , named after the internationally recognized demarcation of the edge of  space, an altitude 100 kilometers above the Earths surface. Virgin Galactic  also flew two crewed suborbital missions using its SpaceShipTwo VSS Unity  spacecraft, which was retired from commercial missions after its June flight.  SpaceShipTwo missions typically reach altitudes of between 85 and 90  kilometers, meeting an alternative definition of space that has previously  been used by NASA, but do not cross the Krmn Line. 
As well as its suborbital missions, Blue Origin has been progressing toward  the first flight of its New Glenn rocket for orbital spaceflight. The most  recent  and final  phase of testing ahead of launch took place at Cape  Canaverals Launch Complex 36 (LC-36) over the last few months , culminating 
in a static fire of the fully-integrated rocket on Friday, Dec. 27. The 
launch is currently scheduled for the night of Jan. 5/6 and will carry a  demonstration payload to orbit with the first stage due to attempt landing on  a barge downrange of the launch site. 
 China 
China carried out 68 orbital launches in 2024, which marks the first year 
that the legacy Chang Zheng 2, 3, and 4 family of rockets has not accounted  for a majority of the countrys launches. A Chang Zheng 2C launches the  Aiyinsitan Tanzhen (Einstein Probe) mission 
These vehicles still made a significant contribution to the total number of  missions, with seven CZ-2C, nine CZ-2D, two CZ-2F/G, eight CZ-3B, four CZ-4B,  and two CZ-4C rockets launching from across the Jiuquan, Taiyuan, and Xichang  Satellite Launch Centers. These launches carried an array of scientific,  commercial, and military satellites, including the Aiyinsitan Tanzhen, or  Einstein Probe, a collaboration between the China Academy of Sciences, the  European Space Agency, and the Max Planck Institute. Deployed in January, 
this x-ray observatory aims to observe emissions from black holes, neutron  stars, and supernovae. 
Another CZ-2C launch in March carried the Distant Retrograde Orbit (DRO)  mission, which aimed to test in-space navigation by placing two small  satellites into orbit around the Moon, with the rocket aided by a 
Yuanzheng-1S (YZ-1S) upper stage. A malfunction with the upper stage left the  spacecraft in a lower-than-planned orbit, but they were still able to reach  their destination under their own power. 
The two CZ-2F/G launches carried crewed Shenzhou missions to the Tiangong  Space Station. 
The newer series of Chang Zheng rockets had a busy year. The heavy-lifting  CZ-5 flew two missions, including the launch of Change-6 in May. This  successfully landed in the Apollo crater basin on the far side of the Moon,  before returning a sample to Earth in June. In addition to the two CZ-5  launches, a third mission using the two-stage CZ-5B configuration with an  add-on YZ-2 upper stage was flown in December, deploying the first 10  spacecraft for the GuoWang constellation of communications satellites.  Change-6 on the Lunar surface. (Credit: CNSA) 
The CZ-6 family of rockets made a total of eight launches across the CZ-6,  CZ-6A, and the new CZ-6C variants. The CZ-6C, which made its debut in May, is  a two-stage version of the larger CZ-6A. A pair of CZ-7 launches in January  and November sent Tianzhou spacecraft to resupply the Tiangong station, while  two CZ-7A launches deployed geosynchronous military satellites in June and  August. A CZ-8 launch in March deployed the Queqiao 2 communications 
satellite to support Change-6s mission to the Moon. Finally, November saw the  introduction of a new medium-capacity rocket, CZ-12. 
In the commercial sector, ExPaces Kuaizhou (KZ) family of rockets flew five  missions, including the debut of a new rocket, KZ-1A Pro. Galactic Energy 
also made five launches with its Gushenxing-1 (GSX-1), which flew twice from  Jiuquan and three times from a barge in the Yellow Sea; the seaborne launches  using the modified GSX-1S variant of the rocket. 
Other seaborne launches included a pair of Jielong-3 rockets and the maiden  flight of OrienSpaces Yinli-1, which took place on Jan. 11. 
 CAS Spaces Lijian-1 (LJ-1) rocket made four launches from the Jiuquan  Satellite Launch Center. The fourth of these took place on Dec. 27, and was  Chinas final launch of 2024, but failed due to an attitude control problem  early in third stage flight. A July launch of iSpaces Shuang Quxian 1 (SQX-1)  also failed to reach orbit with an anomaly occurring around the time of third  and fourth stage separation. 
In November, Landspaces upgraded ZhuQue-2E (ZQ-2E) rocket made its first  launch. 
 Russia 
Russia made 17 orbital launches in 2024, with the Soyuz rocket flying 15 of  these. The other two were flown by the newer Angara vehicle , including that  types first launch from the Vostochny Cosmodrome in April. Vostochny, which  has been used by Soyuz since 2016, was opened to provide an alternative 
launch site for civilian missions from Russian soil, reducing the countrys  reliance on the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Vostochnys lower latitude  compared to the primarily military Plesetsk Cosmodrome will allow Angara to  fly geosynchronous missions with less of a penalty to its performance. 
Angaras launch from Vostochny used the heavy-lift Angara-A5 configuration 
with an Orion upper stage  derived from the Blok DM-03  to carry a mass  simulator into orbit. The types other flight deployed a military payload from  Plesetsk in September, via the smaller Angara-A1.2/AM configuration. The 
first Angara launch from the Vostochny Cosmodrome. (Credit: Roskosmos) 
Three Soyuz launches also took place from Vostochny, deploying the Meteor-M  No.2-4 weather satellite, a pair of Ionosfera-M research satellites, and the  Kondor-FKA No.2 remote sensing satellites as their primary payloads. Two  further civilian remote sensing missions were launched from Baikonur, with 
the Resurs-P No.4 and No.5 satellites deployed by Souyz-2-1b launchers. Four  military Soyuz launches took place from Plesetsk. 
 Baikonur continued to support Russias human spaceflight program, with two  crewed Soyuz-MS missions and four automated Progress resupply spacecraft  launching to the International Space Station. 
2024 was the first year since the introduction of the Proton rocket in 1965 
in which that rocket has not made at least one flight. Protons most recent  mission was in March 2023 and although the type is slated to be replaced by  Angara-A5, it still has plenty of missions on its books. Potential Proton  launches for 2025 include deploying the clandestine Ekvator communications  satellite  which has been speculated to be under development for Iran  as 
well as the Elektro-L No.5 weather satellite. 
The most recently reported date for the debut of Russias new Soyuz-5 rocket   also known variously as Irtysh, Fenix, and Sunkar  was the end of December  2025, but this was announced over a year ago so it will most likely not 
happen next year. One debut that could take place is that of the Rokot-M, a  modernized version of the small Rokot launcher derived from the UR-100  missile. Rokot-M features a new guidance system with Russian-built components  replacing ones that were previously manufactured in Ukraine. It had 
previously been expected to fly in 2024, but a launch date has not yet been  announced. 
 Europe 
European launch provider Arianespace seems to be coming toward the end of a  difficult transition phase that it has been in over the last few years .  Following the retirement of its Ariane 5 rocket in 2023 , the companys Ariane  6 finally lifted off on its maiden flight in July. While the test flight was  not completely successful  a planned restart of the second stage engine could  not be accomplished  it has given Arianespace confidence to proceed with a  customer payload on the rockets next launch in 2025. This is currently slated  for the end of February, carrying the CSO-3 imaging satellite for the French  military. Ariane 6 lifts off on its maiden flight. (Credit: ESA/S. Corvaja) 
Arianespace carried out two other missions in 2024 using its smaller Vega  family of rockets. The first was in September, marking the final flight of 
the original version of Vega. The second took place at the start of December  and saw its replacement, Vega-C, return to flight almost two years after the  failure of its previous mission . Both the September and December launches  carried replacement Sentinel satellites for the Copernicus program, beginning  the replenishment of that projects core constellation. 
Arianespace will enter 2025 under new leadership, with CEO Stphane Israls  departure at the end of December. Isral, who had led Arianespace since 2013,  will be succeeded by David Cavaillols, a former ministerial advisor to the  French government on space policy who more recently worked in senior roles at  IT services company Capgemini. 
With Arianespaces recent difficulties, the European Space Agency (ESA) has  turned to the commercial market to launch more of its missions. EarthCARE , a  climate science mission in partnership with the Japan Aerospace Exploration  Agency (JAXA), was deployed by a SpaceX Falcon 9 in May. The Hera mission to  study binary asteroid (65803) Didymos was deployed by another Falcon 9 in  October and the India Space Research Organisation (ISRO) launched ESAs 
Proba-3 formation-flying experiment aboard a PSLV rocket in December. 
 A number of small satellite launchers continue to be under development in  Europe , with 2024 seeing some reach milestones while others encountered  setbacks. 
 SaxaVord Spaceport , located in the Shetland Islands off the north coast of  Scotland, was granted its range license by the British Civil Aviation  Authority (CAA) in April. This paved the way for German company Rocket 
Factory Augsburg (RFA) to begin engine tests of its RFA One rocket the  following month, but in August the rockets first stage exploded during a  static fire attempt. UPDATE on our S1 test anomaly! 
Our first stage is gone  but we have collected a significant amount of data  and film footage. After reviewing it, we want to share some insights into the  technical analysis, preliminary conclusions and our next steps  pic.twitter.com/FnGHjTCS2g 
 Rocket Factory Augsburg (@rfa_space) August 23, 2024 
 
In December, UK startup Orbex announced that it was abandoning plans to build  its launch site in Sutherland on the north coast of Scotland, instead opting  to launch its rocket, Prime, from SaxaVord. The first mission is currently  slated for 2025. Two more startups: the UKs Skyrora and French company  Latitude, are targeting maiden launches in 2025 from SaxaVord, with their  Skyrora-XL and Zephyr rockets respectively. 
 India 
India launched five orbital missions in 2024; three aboard its Polar 
Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), one using the Geosynchronous Satellite 
Launch Vehicle (GSLV) Mk.II and one using the Small Satellite Launch Vehicle  (SSLV). The launch of the X-Ray Polarimeter Satellite (XPoSat) aboard a  PSLV-DL at 03:40 UTC on Jan. 1 was the first launch of 2024 worldwide. 
A GSLV Mk.II launch in February successfully deployed the INSAT-3DS  communications satellite, while the SSLV made its third demonstration flight  in August, deploying Microsat-2C, a small Earth-imaging spacecraft. 
After a PSLV-XL launch in early December to deploy ESAs Proba-3 mission, the  types third and final launch of the year came on Dec. 30 with the Space  Docking Experiment (SpaDeX) ; a pair of small satellites which will  demonstrate on-orbit rendezvous and docking as India progresses with its 
human spaceflight program. 
Another significant step for this program occurred on Dec. 20, when the  stacking of the launch vehicle for the Gaganyaan-G1 mission  the first  uncrewed test flight of the spacecraft which will carry Indias astronauts 
into space  began at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre. This is expected to lift  off in early 2025 and will be the first in a series of tests before crewed  missions can commence no earlier than 2026. 
 Japan 
Japan made seven orbital launches in 2024. The new H3 rocket developed by 
JAXA and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) reached orbit in February at the  second attempt , 11 months after falling short on its maiden flight. It has  since launched twice more, carrying the ALOS-4 remote sensing satellite in  July and the DSN-3 communications satellite in November. MHI also carried out  two successful missions with its older H-IIA rocket in 2024, deploying  reconnaissance satellites for the Cabinet Satellite Intelligence Center. The  H3 rocket returns to flight. (Credit: JAXA) 
Two launches by commercial operator Space One of its KAIROS (Kii-Based  Advanced and Instant Rocket System) rocket failed to reach orbit. These were  the first orbital launches to be attempted by a commercially developed rocket  in Japan. The first launch took place in March but was destroyed a few 
seconds after liftoff when its automated flight termination system detected  that the rocket was producing less thrust than expected; the second launch 
was made in December but saw the thrust vector control (TVC) system on the  first stage fail a few seconds before burnout. 
The SLIM mission, which had launched in September 2023 and arrived in orbit 
of the Moon in December of that year, touched down on the lunar surface on  Jan. 19. Despite some issues with the orientation of the lander, it survived  through three lunar nights, with the last signals received from the 
spacecraft on April 29. 
Looking ahead to 2025, the final H-IIA launch is expected to occur toward the  start of the next Japanese financial year, which begins on April 1. This will  carry a climate research satellite for JAXA. 
The successes of 2024 pave the way for what could be a busy 2025 for H3, 
which has several key missions lined up. Until now, all of the rockets 
flights have used the H3-22 configuration which features a two-engine first  stage and a pair of solid rocket motors. A test flight of the H3-30  configuration, designed to carry lighter payloads using a three-engine first  stage and no boosters, is scheduled for 2025. The heavier H3-24 configuration  which uses a two-engine stage but with four boosters, is also expected to 
make its debut. 
2025 will also see an H3 launch the first flight of the HTV-X cargo 
spacecraft to the International Space Station. A successor to the H-II  Transfer Vehicle (HTV)  also known as Kounotori  which flew from 2009 until  2020, HTV-X will deliver supplies and experiments to the astronauts aboard 
the Space Station. This mission is currently slated for September. 
A new version of the small Epsilon rocket , Epsilon-S, is currently under  development by JAXA and IHI Aerospace. This suffered a setback in late  November when the vehicles second stage exploded during a test firing. Its  previous test in July 2023 had also ended in failure. Epsilon-S could fly in  2025, although its launch date is under review following the failure and it 
is currently unclear what impact this will have on its already-delayed  schedule. 
 Rest of the World 
Iran had a bumper year in 2024 with four successful orbital launches. The  Qaem-100 rocket reached orbit for the first time at its second attempt in  January, deploying the Suraya satellite. A few days later the liquid-fuelled  Simorgh rocket finally achieved its first successful launch following a run 
of at least five consecutive failures. Simorgh carried Mehda, a technology  demonstration satellite, and a pair of CubeSats. Irans Simorgh rocket lifts  off on its first successful mission. (Credit: Fars News Agency) 
Another Qaem launch in September placed the Chamran 1 satellite into orbit. 
In December Simorgh completed another mission with Saman-1, an experimental  space tug or upper stage. This launch carried a small satellite named 
Fakhr-1, with reports suggesting that Saman-1 was also used to deploy another  satellite into a higher orbit. 
 North Korea attempted a launch at the end of May , with the Malligyong-1-1  reconnaissance satellite. This flew aboard a new rocket which appears to have  been purpose-built for satellite launches, utilizing kerosene propellant and  liquid oxygen as an oxidizer. The name of this rocket has not been announced  and was not included in the Korea Central News Agencys announcement of the  launch, which failed to reach orbit. An explosion was observed in the sky  above the launch site shortly after the rocket lifted off. 
Israel and South Korea, the other countries with operational orbit-capable  launch vehicles, are not known to have attempted any orbital launches in 
2024. 
 (Lead image: Falcon 9 launches on one of its last missions of the year, with  Starlink Group 11-3 on Dec. 29. Credit: SpaceX) 
The post Starlink launch concludes record-breaking 2024 appeared first on  NASASpaceFlight.com .
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