SpaceX will kick off its 2023 campaign on Tuesday by launching 114 satellites on its Transporter-6 rideshare mission. The Falcon 9 rocket is scheduled to liftoff at 9:56 a.m. EST (14:56 UTC) from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.
An Ariane 5 rocket launches the Galaxy 35 and Galaxy 36 geosynchronous communications satellites for Intelsat and the MTG-I1 meteorology satellite for Eumetsat. (Credit: Arianespace)
The U.S. and China set new launch records in 2022. While lagged far behind in third place, Russia could take pride in the fact that all its launches were successful. The year didn’t go quite as well for three other major launching powers, however.
A Falcon 9 launches the EROS-C3 satellite on Dec. 29, 2022. (Credit: SpaceX)
SpaceX and the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC) launched two times apiece this week to end a record year that saw 186 launch attempts around the world.
Soyuz-2 rocket launches 34 OneWeb broadband satellites from the Guiana Space Center. (Credit: Copyright ESA-CNES-Arianespace/Optique Video du CSG – P Piron)
The year looked bright for Russia’s space program as 2022 dawned. Seven Soyuz launches would complete deployment of OneWeb’s 648-satellite broadband constellation. In August, a Proton booster would launch the joint European-Russian ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover to the Red Planet.
A SpaceX Faclon 9 launches the O3b mPOWER FM21 and O3b mPower FM22 communications satellites from Cape Canaveral on Dec. 16, 2022. (Credit: SpaceX)
Part 1 of 2
SpaceX conducted its 61st launch of 2022 on Thursday to wrap up a record year that saw 186 orbital launch attempts worldwide. A Falcon 9 booster launched the EROS-C3 for ImageSat of Israel from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.
Let’s take a look at launch totals worldwide and how the top three nations — United States, China and Russia — faired this year. We will look at launches by other nations in a future post.
The Soyuz MS-22 rocket is launched to the International Space Station with Expedition 68 astronaut Frank Rubio of NASA, and cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitri Petelin of Roscosmos onboard, Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2022, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Rubio, Prokopyev, and Petelin will spend approximately six months on the orbital complex, returning to Earth in March 2023. (Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls)
Russia’s conducted 22 launches without any failures in 2022. Although that is a respectable number, it left a nation that once led the world in orbital flights a distant third behind the United States (87) and China (64) in a record year with 186 launches.
This week on The Space Show with Dr. David Livingston: Tuesday, December 27. 7 PM PST (9 PM CST; 10 PM EST): We welcome back DR. TOM SPILKER for Orbital Assembly Co. updates. Wednesday, December 28. Hotel Mars pre-recorded. See the Upcoming Show Menu at www.thespaceshow.com for details. Wednesday, December 28. SPECIAL SHOW: 7 PM PST; 10 PM EST: We welcome back DR. HAYM BENAROYA with RAYMOND MARTIN on their […]
Richard Branson celebrates the first Virgin Galactic trade on the New York Stock Exchange. (Credit Virgin Galactic)
Virgin Galactic (NYS: SPCE) is back in the news this week in the form of a HBO documentary about company founder Richard Branson as the company’s stock hit an all-time low of $3.28 on Tuesday. And it turns out I am featured in Part 4 of the documentary.
Four launches have been scheduled this week that would bring orbital attempts to a record 186 if all of the missions are conducted as planned. The last minute flurry comes as SpaceX seeks to exceed 60 launches, and Arianespace deals with the fallout from the failure of a Vega-C rocket last week.
In Part I of this series, we looked at how development of small satellite launchers was being impacted by rideshare and secondary payload launches aboard larger boosters. In Part II, we examined the limited number of small boosters available to satellite operators who want to launch their payloads.
British spaceports face competition from bases in Europe’s frozen north
While much attention has been focused on Virgin Orbit’s plan to launch from Spaceport Cornwall in England and the creation of launch facilities in Scotland, the development of new orbital spaceports in Scandinavia has largely flown under the radar. But, now one of those Nordic bases is ready for its closeup.