SpaceX is set for an 11:06 a.m. EST launch of a Falcon 9 with pair of communications satellites on Tuesday, Nov. 8. Pad 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station will host this year's 49th rocket to take flight from the Space Coast.
The mission for Luxembourg-based operator, Intelsat, will loft a pair of near-identical communications satellites called Galaxy 31 & 32. That is if the weather will cooperate for a launch attempt.
Space Force forecasters have issued only a 30% chance of acceptable liftoff conditions for Tuesday's launch. Conditions deteriorate even further to only 20% for a backup opportunity on Wednesday around the same time.
"Wind speeds and shower coverage at the Spaceport" were expressed as the main concerns for liftoff by Space Force forecasters in a weekend report.
The National Hurricane Center in Miami has given an area of low pressure located north of Puerto Rico a 90% chance of developing into a subtropical or tropical depression sometime this week.
Although the storm system is still very disorganized, by early-to-mid week "an increasing risk of coastal flooding, gale-force winds, heavy rainfall, rough surf, and beach erosion" can be expected along Florida's east coast the National Hurricane Center said over the weekend.
Upper-level winds are marked as a moderate risk by the Space Force while conditions for booster recovery are marked as a "high" risk. However, SpaceX isn't expected to attempt a landing of any kind with this mission's Falcon 9 first stage.
Launch Tuesday, November 8
Company / Agency: SpaceX for Intelsat
Rocket: Falcon 9
Location: Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station
Launch Time: 11:06 a.m. EST
Landing: None
Trajectory: Northeast
Weather: 30% "go"
Live coverage: Starts 60 minutes before liftoff at floridatoday.com/space
About: SpaceX will launch the Galaxy 31 & 32 communications satellites for Luxembourg-based operator Intelsat.
Quelle: Florida Today
----
Update: 12.11.2022
.
SpaceX rocket launches 2 big telecom satellites on record-tying 14th mission
A Falcon 9 sent two spacecraft to orbit for Intelsat today (Nov. 12).
SpaceX launched two telecom satellites on Saturday (Nov. 12), tying its own rocket reuse record in the process.
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Florida's Cape Canaveral Space ForceStation at 11:06 a.m. EST (1606 GMT) on Saturday, carrying Intelsat's Galaxy 31 and Galaxy 32 satellites aloft.
It was the 14th mission for this Falcon 9's first stage, tying a SpaceX record. The booster also helped loft Demo-2, SpaceX's first-ever astronaut flight, in May 2020; the RADARSAT Constellation Mission; the SXM-7 spacecraft for SiriusXM; and 10 big batches of SpaceX's Starlink satellites, the company wrote in a mission description(opens in new tab).
There will be no 15th flight for this booster, however; SpaceX did not try to bring it down for a safe landing and future reuse.
"Today's payload needed a little more performance out of Falcon 9, and so we had to use the propellants that we would normally use for the entry burn and landing burn to instead take the payload to orbit," SpaceX space operations engineer Siva Bharadvaj said during a webcast of the launch.
Galaxy 31 and Galaxy 32 are both quite heavy, and the Falcon 9 carried them to a distant geosynchronous transfer orbit. The rocket's upper stage deployed the two satellites as planned about 33 minutes and 38 minutes after liftoff, respectively.
The duo will help Intelsat refresh its communications fleet, the company said on its website(opens in new tab). The high-speed satellites represent a "new generation of technology" for customers that largely include television broadcasters, Intelsat officials stated.
Galaxy 31 and Galaxy 32 will replace older North American-focused satellites in geosynchronous orbit, meaning they will remain consistently above one area of Earth.
Saturday's launch was the second Intelsat mission in just over a month for SpaceX, which lofted the Galaxy 33 and Galaxy 34 satellites using a Falcon 9 on Oct. 8. (It was the 14th mission for that rocket's first stage as well, by the way.)
At the time, Intelsat officials said the two Galaxy satellites will provide fresh capabilities in C-band, a radio frequency range that Galaxy 31 and 32 will also use.
Saturday's launch was the 52nd overall for SpaceX in 2022, adding to the company's growing single-year record (which had been 31, set in 2021). It was also the 48th flight this year using a previously flown Falcon 9 rocket.
The vast majority of SpaceX launches in 2022 have served to grow the company's enormous Starlink satellite-internet constellation. But SpaceX has also launched other companies' satellites to orbit, as well as cargo and crew missions to the International Space Station with Falcon 9s in 2022.