SpaceX aims to launch its 16th batch Starlink Broadband Satellite Monday, a day later A new NASA and European Space Agency satellite has been sent to Bit Rabbit.
Promoting a new set of spinning wheels has become a routine topic for Elon Musk’s rocket company as it works. Build a mega-date
With thousands of individual satellites in a low-lying Earth. But the mission is to put a new wing in Musk’s cap.
The first phase of the Falcon 9 rocket is set to make its seventh flight, a record for rocket recycling for the company. The booster first flew over a pair of four Starlink missions and a large pair of satellite launches.
SpaceX will likely try to land a booster on a droneship in the Atlantic shortly after launch and try to catch two parts of the nose cone, or fairing, with ships.
It all happens when SpaceX makes another big start on the other side of the country. Saturday morning, another The Falcon 9 flew from Vandenberg Air Force Base The new NASA / European space agency Sentinel 6 in California is bringing the Michael Freilich satellite designed to monitor global sea level rise and improve weather forecasting.
In fact, Starlink’s launch was scheduled to take place just 10 hours after the lift off the Sentinel 6 mission, but it was pushed back a few days later.
Scheduled for launch 9:34 a.m. ET / 6:34 p.m. on Monday. You can see the whole thing here: