United Launch Alliance rocket blasts off from Florida carrying Air Force
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[August 08, 2019]
By Joey Roulette
(Reuters) - United Launch Alliance, a joint
venture between Boeing Co and Lockheed Martin Corp, blasted off into
space on Thursday morning, one of the final satellites for the U.S. Air
Force's new secure communications network.
The satellite was launched at 6:13 a.m. (1030 GMT) from Florida's Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station atop ULA's Atlas V rocket, the same vehicle
primed to send a manned space capsule into orbit for NASA by 2020.
Thursday's successful launch followed a rare spate of technical delays
with the venture’s flagship rocket.
The Lockheed Martin-built Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF)
satellite is one of six in a constellation upgrade to the Air Force
Space and Missile Systems Center’s older Milstar network.
The AEHF-5 mission was originally slated for lift-off on June 27, but a
battery issue pushed that date to July 9. Launch was again delayed due
to a mishap with a supplier’s component of the rocket, which "demands
that all parts are suspect until we can prove otherwise," ULA chief
executive Tory Bruno wrote on Twitter after suspending a separate ULA
launch for the Air Force over the same mishap concern.
The joint venture is transitioning from its Atlas V rocket — a legacy
workhorse for U.S. national security missions — to Vulcan Centaur, a
heavy-lift vehicle tailored to compete for lucrative defense contracts
and wean the United States off the Russian-made RD-180 engines that
power Atlas.
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A United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket lifts off from the Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S., August
8, 2019. Aboard is the fifth Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF)
satellite, designed to provide the U.S. military with highly-secure
communications. REUTERS/Joe Skipper
ULA is one of a handful of companies vying for a five-year,
25-mission Air Force contract that will be awarded in 2020 to two
winners, posing a high-stakes battle between the launch stalwart and
newer entrants such as Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue
Origin, which are also expected to submit bids.
The $1.1 billion satellite launched Thursday marked ULA's 74th
mission for the U.S. defense department and the fifth secure
communications spacecraft for the Air Force’s new constellation that
will serve military-grade ground, sea and air communications for the
U.S. troops, Canada, Britain, Australia, and the Netherlands. The
final satellite in the constellation is due for launch in March
2020.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing Rich McKay and Angus MacSwan)
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