SpaceX launches Falcon Heavy rocket with
24 satellites
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[June 25, 2019]
By Bill Tarrant
(Reuters) - SpaceX launched its Falcon
Heavy rocket on Tuesday from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, carrying
24 experimental satellites in what Elon Musk's rocket company called one
of the most difficult launches it has attempted.
The craft blasted off to cheers from onlookers at 2:30 a.m. (0630 GMT)
after a three-hour delay from the original launch time late Monday.
The boosters separated safely as the craft began its six-hour mission to
deploy the satellites.
The two-side booster rockets returned safely to Earth, landing on
adjacent Air Force landing pads, but the rocket's center booster missed
its mark, crashing in the Atlantic ocean.
Musk, who predicted trouble with landing the center booster on SpaceX's
drone ship in the Atlantic, said on Twitter early Tuesday, "It was a
long shot."
The mission, dubbed Space Test Program 2 (STP-2), is the third for the
Falcon Heavy rocket, which SpaceX describes as the most powerful launch
system in the world.
It was commissioned by the U.S. Department of Defense, the key
contractor for commercial space companies such as SpaceX.
The company is putting satellites into orbit for agencies including NASA
and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), defense
department laboratories, universities and a non-profit organization,
SpaceX said.
The mission is one of the most challenging in SpaceX history, with four
separate upper-stage engine burns and three separate orbits to deploy
satellites, the company said on its website.
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A SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket, carrying the U.S. Air Force's Space
Test Program 2 Mission, lifts off from the Kennedy Space Center in
Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S., June 25, 2019. REUTERS/Joe Skipper
SOLAR SAIL
The payloads on the satellites Falcon Heavy is putting into orbit
include an atomic clock NASA is testing for space navigation,
another testing new telescope technologies, and a solar sail project
part-funded by the Planetary Society, a non-profit organization
headed by Bill Nye, "The Science Guy" on television presentations.
The LightSail is a crowdfunded project that aims to become the first
spacecraft in earth orbit propelled solely by sunlight, the society,
which has championed solar propulsion for decades, says on its
website.
Falcon Heavy is the most powerful operational rocket in the world
"by a factor of two," SpaceX says on its website. It has the ability
to lift into orbit nearly 64 metric tons (141,000 pounds) - more
than a 737 jetliner loaded with passengers, crew, luggage and fuel.
Only the Saturn V moon rocket, last flown in 1973 from the same
launch pad, delivered more payload to orbit, it says.
(Reporting by Bill Tarrant and Rich McKay; additional reporting by
Joey Roulette; Editing by Mark Potter and Louise Heavens)
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