Rocket Lab will launch a radar satellite Thursday (Sept. 15) and you’ll watch the motion reside.
An Electron booster is scheduled to carry off from Rocket Lab’s New Zealand web site on the North Island’s Mahia Peninsula on Thursday at 4:30 p.m. EDT (2030 GMT, or 8:30 a.m. native time on Friday, Sept. 16).
The launch of the Strix-1 satellite on behalf of Synspective will stream reside right here at Area.com when the time comes, courtesy of Rocket Lab. You can even watch it directly via the company (opens in new tab).
Associated: Rocket Lab and its Electron booster (photos)
Thursday’s mission known as “The Owl Spreads Its Wings.” (Strix is a various and widespread genus of owls.)
“Strix-1 is Synspective’s first business satellite for its artificial aperture radar (SAR) satellite constellation to ship imagery that may detect millimeter-level adjustments to the Earth’s floor from space, unbiased of climate circumstances on Earth and at any time of the day or night time,” Rocket Lab officers wrote of the new mission (opens in new tab).
Rocket Lab additionally efficiently lofted Strix satellites for Synspective in December 2020 and February 2022. These missions had been named with owl themes as properly.
Rocket Lab officers framed this launch as a milestone mission: Thursday’s mission shall be Rocket Lab’s thirtieth Electron launch, bringing its one hundred and fiftieth satellite into space and flying its three hundredth Rutherford engine.
The flight additionally follows Rocket Lab’s profitable launch of NASA’s CAPSTONE probe to the moon; the corporate additionally goals to ship a number of life-hunting missions to Venus within the coming years.
Rocket Lab plans to make the primary stage of Electron totally reusable, and has efficiently fired up a booster recovered (and inadvertently dunked within the ocean) with a helicopter on May 2, throughout a mission referred to as “There and Again Once more.”
The corporate will not be trying a restoration on Thursday’s launch, nonetheless, and Electron’s first stage will fall naturally into the drink after engine cutoff.
Observe Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace (opens in new tab). Observe us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab).