Amazon to launch 27 internet satellites from space coast
Dr. Don Platt, an Associate Professor of Space Systems at Florida Tech, told us, 'This is definitely some competition to the Starlink network of SpaceX communication satellites.'
Amazon says the satellites flying on this mission are an upgrade over the pair of prototype Kuiper satellites that launched from our Space Coast in October of 2023.
Over the next few years, roughly 80 project Kuiper launches are planned on ULA, Arianespace, SpaceX, and Blue Origin rockets.
Launch is currently scheduled for no earlier than (NET) 12 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, April 9.
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USA Today
28 minutes ago
- USA Today
Could Starship help humanity establish a city on Mars? Inside SpaceX, Elon Musk's plan
Starship, which SpaceX has launched on nine flight tests from Starbase in South Texas, is the centerpiece of Elon Musk's plan to establish a city on Mars in a matter of years. The idea that humans could one day populate and even colonize Mars is one no longer confined to the realm of science fiction. Astronauts are on the cusp in the years ahead of journeying all the way to the Red Planet, where so far only rovers and orbiters have dared to venture. And when they do, it's likely they'll make landfall aboard a SpaceX Starship. Billionaire Elon Musk founded SpaceX in 2002 with the vision of paving the way to create a self-sustaining colony on the Red Planet. By April 2023, the company rolled out its massive Starship – the rocket/spacecraft combo designed to reach Mars – to its South Texas launch pad for what would be its first of nine flight tests to date. While Starship has endured a few explosive setbacks in 2025, SpaceX is preparing for a mission it refers to as flight 10 as early as Sunday, Aug. 24 to get the vehicle's development back on track. But Starship has a long way to go before it can carry the first spacefarers to Mars and fulfill Musk's oft-stated dream of "making life multiplanetary." Here's everything to know about Elon Musk's goal of setting up the first human city on Mars, and how Starship, which could soon fly again for the first time since May 27, fits in to those plans. Why is Elon Musk interested in sending Starship to Mars? Musk, who has often spoken publicly about his Mars vision, delivered his latest public updates in late May in front of employees from Starbase, SpaceX's headquarters near the U.S.-Mexico border that recently became its own Texas city. In a video SpaceX shared May 29 on social media site X, which Musk owns, the world's richest man described to his employees the goal of sending humans to Mars as essential 'for the long term survival of civilization." Under Musk's vision, humans would not just step on the planet before departing, but would remain to establish a settlement that could function independently if any cataclysmic event were to ever happen on Earth. So, why Mars, as opposed to, say, Jupiter or Venus? Well, while other planets in our solar system are anything but habitable for humans, Mars gets a decent amount of sunlight, has water sources and is already a planet where humanity has sent robotic rovers to scout the terrain. At an average distance of 140 million miles from Earth, it's also one of our closest cosmic neighbors. While Mars has a thin atmosphere and is relatively cold, SpaceX claims on its website, "we can warm it up." Gravity on Mars is about 38% of that of Earth's, meaning humans would be able to lift heavier objects and bound around. What is Starship? World' largest rocket developed for travel to Mars SpaceX is developing Starship specifically with a Martian destination in mind. The spacecraft is designed to be a fully reusable transportation system, meaning the rocket and vehicle can return to the ground for additional missions. The Starship, standing 403 feet tall when fully stacked, is regarded as the world's largest and most powerful launch vehicle ever developed. When fully integrated, the launch system is composed of both a 232-foot Super Heavy rocket and the 171-foot upper stage Starship itself, the spacecraft where crew and cargo would ride. Super Heavy alone is powered by 33 of SpaceX's Raptor engines that give the initial burst of thrust at liftoff. The upper stage Starship section is powered by six Raptor engines that will ultimately travel in orbit. When could SpaceX launch Starship to Mars? Musk wants to send the first uncrewed Starship to Mars by the end of 2026 for a very critical reason: The timeline coincides with an orbital alignment around the sun that would shorten the journey between Earth and Mars. It's a slim window that occurs once about every two years, and if SpaceX misses it, Musk has said the company would target another mission during the next alignment. If Starship were to blast off for the Red Planet by the end of 2026, the journey itself would take between seven to nine months. While no humans would have a seat on the first flight to Mars, Starship won't be empty. Instead, the vehicle would carry one or more Optimus robots designed and built by Tesla, Musk's electric vehicle company. Where, how would Starship land on Mars? Starship would enter Mars' atmosphere while zooming at 4.6 miles per second before it begins decelerating. The vehicle's heatshield is designed to withstand multiple atmospheric entries, but the Martian environment is expected to be harsher on the spacecraft, given its higher levels of atomic oxygen in the atmosphere, according to SpaceX. SpaceX is still considering multiple potential landing sites on Mars for Starship, but the leading contender appears to be a region known as Arcadia. The volcanic plain is on Mars' northern hemisphere far from the planet's frigid poles, with access to water sources in the form of shallow ice. Arcadia is also flat enough to make landings and takeoffs relatively safer, Musk has said. What happens when the first humans arrive on Mars? Crewed trips with humans would then follow most likely in the early 2030s, Musk has claimed. Musk said he envisions eventually launching 1,000 to 2,000 Starships to Mars every two years so enough people and supplies can make it to the surface to quickly establish a livable, self-sufficient city. Achieving that goal would require more than 1 million Martian residents and millions of tons of cargo, according to SpaceX. For that reason, the company has an ambitious target of one day in the years ahead launching Starship more than 10 times per day from Earth to Mars during those crucial transfer windows every 26 months. The first humans on Mars would be tasked with taking account of local resources, setting up landing operations, establishing a power source and building homes. How does Musk's vision fit in Trump's, align with NASA's Artemis campaign? NASA also has designs on astronauts reaching Mars – even if the agency's plan of attack differs from Musk's. Starship is crucial to the U.S. space agency's goal of returning astronauts to the moon's surface for the first time in five decades. NASA's lunar exploration plans call for Artemis III astronauts aboard the Orion capsule to board the Starship while in orbit for a ride to the moon's surface as early as 2027. Once NASA has established a basecamp on the lunar south pole in the years ahead, the agency envisions sending humans from the moon on to Mars. Musk, though, has long favored a more aggressive Earth-to-Mars approach. President Donald Trump also outlined in his January inauguration speech his intent for humans to "plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars" during his second term – a vision from which he hasn't appeared to waver even after a public spat with Musk in June. While Trump has proposed a significant 25% slash to NASA's overall budget, the cuts mostly target the space agency's science programs while increasing funding for space exploration – including missions to Mars. The White House's 2026 budget proposal calls for allocating more than $1 billion for Mars exploration, while an additional $10 billion in funding for NASA was included in Republican spending legislation known as the One Big Beautiful Bill. Trump also signed earlier in August an executive order aimed at rolling back federal regulations on commercial spaceflight companies, including SpaceX. The move came a few months after the Federal Aviation Administration, which licenses commercial rocket launches, gave approval in May for SpaceX to conduct as many as 25 Starship test flights a year as Musk seeks to ramp up development of the Mars-bound spacecraft. When is the next Starship launch from Starbase, Texas? SpaceX plans to conduct the 10th flight test of its Starship spacecraft Sunday, Aug. 24, with a target liftoff time of 7:30 p.m. ET the company's Starbase headquarters in Cameron County, about 23 miles from Brownsville. Eric Lagatta is the Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at elagatta@

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Secretive mini space shuttle set for Space Coast launch; late-night sonic boom possible
It won't have any crew, but the U.S. Space Force is set to send the Boeing-built X-37B spacecraft — which looks like a miniature space shuttle — back for a long-duration mission to orbit during a late-night launch Thursday. A SpaceX Falcon 9 is set to lift off with the spacecraft on the USSF-36 mission from Kennedy Space Center's Launch Pad 39-A targeting liftoff at 11:50 p.m. during a launch window that runs from runs until 5:11 a.m., according to the Federal Aviation Administration. A backup option is available during a window from 12-5:31 a.m. Saturday. Space Launch Delta 45's weather squadron forecasts a 65% chance for good conditions at the opening of the window, which improves to 80% by the end of it. Similar conditions are forecast if delayed 24 hours. The first-stage booster is making its sixth trip to space and will aim for a recovery at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station's Landing Zone 2, which means parts of Central Florida could be in store to hear one or more late-night sonic booms. The spacecraft is designated an Orbital Test Vehicle and is about 29 feet long with a 14-foot wingspan. This is the second of two versions of the spacecraft that so far have combined to fly seven times since April 2010, spending more than 4,200 days in space. In comparison, the space shuttle orbiters were 184 feet long with 78-foot wingspan. Boeing's uncrewed spacecraft fits in normal rocket fairings, or nosecones, and has flown five times on United Launch Alliance Atlas V rockets, once on SpaceX Falcon 9 and once on Falcon Heavy. The Space Force did not announce the planned duration for this mission, designated OTV-8, but OTV-7, which used the other of Boeing's two spacecraft and launched in 2023 atop a Falcon Heavy, didn't land until this past March spending more than 434 days in orbit. The last time this particular spacecraft flew, launching in 2020, it didn't return to Earth until more than 908 days later. The spacecraft has made landings both at the former Space Shuttle Landing Facility at KSC as well as in California at Vandenberg Space Force Base. Just what the X-37B carries to orbit is mostly classified, but the Department of Defense states it uses the vehicle to test technologies for long-duration missions and bring them safely back to Earth. The latest mission will have more capacity for experiments, flying with a service module attached to the rear for the third time. For this mission, the Space Force did announce some payloads. One is in partnership with the Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office testing out next-generation laser communications and another is 'the highest performing quantum inertial sensor ever tested in space' for the Defense Innovation Unit, according to a press release. The lasers aim to target existing commercial satellite networks in low-Earth orbit, with the Space Force deeming them more reliable, secure and capable of transmitting more data than traditional radio transmissions. 'OTV-8's laser communications demonstration will mark an important step in the U.S. Space Force's ability to leverage proliferated space networks as part of a diversified and redundant space architectures,' said Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman in the release. 'In so doing, it will strengthen the resilience, reliability, adaptability and data transport speeds of our satellite communications architecture.' The physics-focused quantum inertial sensor is design to figure out navigation without relying on GPS, but instead detect the rotation and acceleration of atoms while on orbit. The DOD touts it as technology the could be useful outside of low-Earth orbit as there is no global positioning support in cislunar space, the area between the Earth and the moon, or in deep space. 'OTV 8's quantum inertial sensor demonstration is a welcome step forward for operational resilience in space,' said Space Force Col. Ramsey Horn, the commander of Space Delta 9. 'Whether navigating beyond Earth based orbits in cislunar space or operating in GPS-denied environments, quantum inertial sensing allows for robust navigation capabilities when GPS navigation is not possible.' For Boeing's part, the spaceplane has been a successful highlight while some of its other projects including Starliner and NASA's Space Launch System rocket have faced budget overruns and mission delays. This launch comes less than six months since the last mission's completion. 'With each successive flight, the X-37B has demonstrated adaptability and flexibility by hosting diverse experiments and pioneering new orbital regimes,' said Michelle Parker, vice president of Boeing Space Mission Systems. 'This mission continues that legacy by fielding cutting-edge technologies that advance our nation's space capability and improve the resilience of future architectures.' -------------- Solve the daily Crossword


UPI
2 hours ago
- UPI
SpaceX to launch Space Force spaceplane X-37B
SpaceX to launch X-37B space plane for the U.S. Space Force on Thursday from the Kennedy Space Center, In Florida at 11:50 p.m. EDT. File Photo by Staff Sgt. Adam Shanks/U.S. Space Force/UPI | License Photo Aug. 21 (UPI) -- SpaceX is scheduled to launch a space plane for the U.S. Space Force from Florida on Thursday night. A Falcon 9 rocket is set to launch the Space Force's X-37B space plane from Kennedy Space Center at 11:50 p.m. EDT. Meteorologists forecast a 65% chance for favorable conditions for liftoff, with improving conditions to 80% favorable as the window progresses, as they monitored any impact Hurricane Erin would have as it moves alongside the East Coast. "The very large Hurricane Erin will continue moving north and eventually northeast off the eastern coast of the US and out into the open Atlantic through the remainder of the week," launch weather officers wrote. "As it does so, it will leave behind a trailing trough and deeper moisture that will merge with a boundary dropping into the southeastern US. Prevailing flow will shift out of the west into Thursday, which will lead to the best coverage of afternoon and evening storms favoring the east side of the state including the Spaceport." The Boeing-made X-37B will carry out the missions, USSF-36 and Orbital Test Vehicle 8 as the Space Force attempts to test a new in-space positioning system. The mission will include demonstrations of a laser communications system and what the Space Force has hailed as "the world's highest performing quantum inertial sensor ever used in space." "OTV-8's quantum inertial sensor demonstration is a welcome step forward for operational resilience in space," said Col. Ramsey Horn, Space Delta 9 commander. "Whether navigating beyond Earth based orbits in cislunar space or operating in GPS-denied environments, quantum inertial sensing allows for robust navigation capabilities when GPS navigation is not possible." This is the sixth flight for the Falcon 9 booster; NROL-69, CRS-32 GP III-7 and Starlink groups 12-13 and 10-34 all used this booster.