This week’s SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket launch was the primary one in all that kind in 40 months, and whetted space followers’ appetites for extra.
Followers of Falcon Heavy , an enormous rocket constructed by SpaceX , will not have that lengthy of a niche subsequent time after the epic Nov. 1 launch that hefted a army satellite to space. The following mission could launch as quickly as December, though the timing has numerous uncertainty.
There are two contenders for the following launch: one other army satellite on behalf of Area Pressure, or a communications satellite for ViaSat to start a trio of high-bandwidth communication launches.
ViaSat has not but confirmed its October promise (opens in new tab) that the launch will go later this yr, and sure will not accomplish that till it releases monetary outcomes on Tuesday (Nov. 8), on the earliest. SpaceFlightNow’s launch calendar (opens in new tab) suggests NET (no sooner than) December 2022, however the date is tentative and will push into the brand new yr.
Associated: Why SpaceX hasn’t flown a Falcon Heavy rocket since 2019
Alternatively, a categorised payload for Area Pressure (referred to as USSF-67) is anticipated to go ahead as quickly as January 2023, based on an October report from SpaceFlightNow (opens in new tab) , which discovered potential clues for the satellite’s performance within the mission patch.
“Mission patches for the USSF-67 launch point out it’ll carry the second spacecraft for the Area Pressure’s Steady Broadcast Augmenting SATCOM, or CBAS, program,” the report acknowledged. “The primary CBAS satellite launched in 2018, and officers mentioned then the satellite was designed to relay communications alerts between senior leaders and army combatant commanders.”
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(Picture credit score: SpaceX)
Prepared for motion
SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket awaits its flight to space on Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Area Middle.
(Picture credit score: SpaceX)
Blasting right into a cloud
Fog shrouds the primary liftoff of SpaceX Falcon Heavy in 40 months on Nov. 1, 2022.
(Picture credit score: SpaceX)
Streaking for space
After lifting off in heavy fog circumstances, the livestream confirmed SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy streaking into space on Nov. 1, 2022.
(Picture credit score: Area Launch Delta 45 by way of Twitter)
Borne on a contrail
The SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch on Nov. 1, 2022 was the primary one in 40 months.
(Picture credit score: Area Launch Delta 45 by way of Twitter)
A weighty secret
The precise nature of the Area Pressure payload upon SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket Nov. 1, 2022 has not but been disclosed.
(Picture credit score: SpaceX)
(Picture credit score: Area Launch Delta 45 by way of Twitter)
Foggy backside
One of many SpaceX Falcon Heavy booster levels is barely seen in thick cloud circumstances in Florida throughout touchdown Nov. 1, 2022.
(Picture credit score: SpaceX)
Double landing
The 2 facet levels for SpaceX Falcon Heavy pivot to a landing on Nov. 1, 2022.
(Picture credit score: SpaceX by way of Twitter)
Aiming for the bottom
One other view of the SpaceX Falcon Heavy boosters making a protected landing on Nov. 1, 2022.
(Picture credit score: SpaceX)
Quadruple affirmation
The livestream confirmed the 2 boosters making their method safely to landing after launching a SpaceX Falcon Heavy Nov. 1, 2022.
The lengthy hole for the reason that final launch in June 2019 was largely as a result of delays with the delivery of payloads on the rocket’s manifest, however within the meantime, SpaceX has been shifting ahead a number of occasions a month with launches of its a lot lighter Falcon 9 workhorse. It is already achieved greater than 50 of these in 2022, which is a document.
Falcon Heavy itself is constructed on first-stage boosters, all modified variations of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket, that may make vertical touchdowns after liftoff. (The core stage normally drops upon a SpaceX drone ship within the ocean, though Tuesday’s launch noticed the stage ditch within the ocean as a result of needing to make use of most of its gasoline to spice up the satellite to geostationary orbit.)
Elizabeth Howell is the co-author of “ Why Am I Taller (opens in new tab) ?” (ECW Press, 2022; with Canadian astronaut Dave Williams), a e book about space medication. Observe her on Twitter @howellspace (opens in new tab) . Observe us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab) .