For the majority of Americans, 2017 has not been a year to celebrate, nor a year that would warrant much optimism for our future.
That is why it's crucial to highlight successes and technological advances - especially those that are space-related - lest they get lost or drowned out by the horrifying events that define our current political landscape.
Based on the first six months of the year, SpaceX is having its most successful year to date, with an impressive line-up of nine (!) launches and seven landings, all of which have been a resounding success. The month of June alone saw three SpaceX missions - two of them this past weekend launched from opposite coasts within 48 hours of each other.
Almost every one of these nine missions included historic milestone achievements for SpaceX as well as spaceflight in general. Below is a list of the nine SpaceX missions through the month of June, with information about them and historic milestones marked as these missions achieved their objectives, one after the other.
SpaceX's 10th mission of the year, the launch of an Intelsat satellite from Cape Canaveral, is currently scheduled for no earlier than July 2.
1. January 14, 2017
From: Vandenberg Air Force Base, CA, Space Launch Complex 4E
Payload: First of multiple missions to deploy Iridium NEXT satellites
Client: Iridium Communications, McLean, VA
Landing: Drone ship in the Pacific, Just Read The Instructions
Historic milestones:
1. Return-to-flight mission after the loss of the Amos-6 payload in September 2016
2. First successful drone ship landing in the Pacific
Image credit: SpaceX
Iridium-1 mission, January 14, 2107
Image credit: SpaceX
Iridium-1 mission, January 14, 2107
2. February 19, 2017
From: Kennedy Space Center, FL, Launch Complex 39A
Payload: CRS-10, 10th commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station
Client: NASA, Houston, TX
Landing: Ground pad at Kennedy Space Center
SpaceX's technical webcast for the CRS-10 mission
February 19, 2017
3. March 16, 2107
From: Kennedy Space Center, FL, Launch Complex 39A
Payload: EchoStar 23 communications satellite
Client: EchoStar, Englewood, CO
Landing: No attempt made
Image credit: SpaceX
Iridium mission, March 16, 2107
4. March 30, 2017
From: Kennedy Space Center, FL, Launch Complex 39A
Payload: SES-10 communications satellite
Client: SES, Luxembourg
Landing: Drone ship in the Atlantic, Of Course I Still Love You
Historic milestones:
1. First re-use of a recovered Stage 1 rocket (B1021), which also landed again. The rocket was first flown during the CRS-8 mission to the ISS in April, 2016.
2. The payload fairing also remained intact, as SpaceX began testing reusable fairings during missions. The fairing was equipped with thrusters and parachutes for landing maneuvers.
World's First Reflight of an Orbital Class Rocket Hosted Webcast
March 30, 2017
5. May 1, 2017
From: Kennedy Space Center, FL, Launch Complex 39A
Payload: NROL-76 (classified)
Client: National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), Chantilly, VA
Landing: Ground pad at Kennedy Space Center
Historic milestone:
SpaceX's first launch under its certification for national security missions.
Image credit: SpaceX
NROL-76 mission, May 1, 2017
6. May 15, 2017
From: Kennedy Space Center, FL, Launch Complex 39A
Payload: Inmarsat-5 communications satellite
Client: Inmarsat, London
Landing: No attempt made
Historic milestone:
Heaviest payload (6,070 kg) launched to geostationary transfer orbit by a Falcon 9 rocket to date.
Image credit: SpaceX
Inmarsat-5 mission, May 15, 2015
7. June 3, 2017
From: Kennedy Space Center, FL, Launch Complex 39A
Payload: CRS-11, 11th commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station. Delivery of NICER, MUSES and ROSA science instruments to the ISS.
Client: NASA, Houston, TX
Landing: Ground pad at Kennedy Space Center
Historic milestone:
First re-use of a refurbished Dragon capsule (C106), which first flew as part of the CRS-4 mission in September 2014.
Image credit: SpaceX
CRS-11 mission, June 3, 2017
Image credit: SpaceX
CRS-11 mission, June 3, 2017
just because you think the majority agrees with your political views, does not make it a fact. way to piss off a LARGE portion (notice i didnt say majority, half, etc) of your readers by pushing your political agenda. what a fucking joke.
ReplyDeleteJust because YOU are a sad, bitter, broken little thing doesn't mean that everyone else has to tread softly to avoid hurting your feelings, snowflake. The writer of the article is free to write the article any way they want; if that leaves you angry and butthurt that's a shame, but I think the rest of us will still manage to get by somehow.
DeleteDear Unknown (of course) - You seem to labor under two faulty impressions:
ReplyDelete1. That it is your place to tell me what to tweet and blog about. Hahaha, yeah right. Don't like what I write? Don't read, unfollow, do whatever you need to do to remove yourself from my sphere of influence.
2. That I am losing followers because I'm using my @ct_la account which used to be almost entirely space-themed to help save our imperiled democracy from the greatest dangers it has faced in modern history. In fact, the opposite is happening and I've been gaining followers. Feel free to provide evidence to the contrary, "Unknown". Plus, even if you were correct and I were losing followers by broadening the topics I tweet about, so flocking what? Don't you think I considered that? I even tweeted about that very possibility! Saving and improving American democracy is orders of magnitude more important than twitter follower counts. I would still do it even if it would cost me 1000s of followers.
HTH