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SpaceX launches Falcon Heavy [Block 5] and lands all three rocket boosters for the first time

Hamartia Antidote

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SpaceX showing who is the boss by launching an upgraded Falcon Heavy rocket even more powerful than the first.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/11/livestream-watch-spacex-falcon-heavy-rocket-launch-and-landing.html

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SpaceX launches its Falcon Heavy rocket.
SpaceX

In the months since its demonstration flight, SpaceX has seen orders for Falcon Heavy launches grow. The manifest for Falcon Heavy has grown to five contracted missions, including three commercial missions and a $130 million contract to launch the Air Force Space Command-52 satellite. The rocket cost over $500 million to develop, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said last year.

Musk noted in a tweet Wednesday that this Falcon Heavy utilizes the upgraded “Block 5” version of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket, which flew for the first time last year. Musk said that this adds “some risk of failure between 5% to 10%,” as “the changes are unproven” even with “many good design improvements.” Beyond the risk, the Block 5 upgrades add nearly 10% more thrust to Falcon Heavy compared with the demonstration mission last year, Musk added.



 
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SpaceX warp capability, here we come!
 
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http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-04/12/c_137970399.htm

SpaceX's Falcon Heavy completes first commercial launch

WASHINGTON, April 11 (Xinhua) -- The world's most powerful operational rocket completed its first commercial launch on Thursday, bringing a Saudi Arabian telecommunications satellite into the orbit.

The Falcon Heavy, developed by the private U.S. space flight company SpaceX, blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center in the U.S. State of Florida at 6:35 p.m. American Eastern Time.

About eight minutes after liftoff, the reusable rocket's two side boosters landed back on ground near the launch center, showed SpaceX's live broadcast.

About two minutes later, its center core landed successfully on the "Of Course I Still Love You" droneship in the Atlantic Ocean. During the heavy-lift rocket's debut launch last year, the first attempt to recover the center core failed.

About 34 minutes after the liftoff, the satellite was deployed into the orbit.

Arabsat-6A is a high-capacity telecommunications satellite that will deliver television, radio, Internet, and mobile communications to customers in the Middle East, Africa, and Europe.

This is Falcon Heavy's second launch. On Feb. 6, 2018, the rocket carried a red Tesla Roadster into space in a demonstration of the rocket's capability in order to get more orders.

With a total of 27 Merlin engines, the Falcon Heavy is capable of generating "more than 5 million pounds (2.3 million kg) of thrust at liftoff, equal to about eighteen 747 aircraft," according to SpaceX.

The rocket will be able to lift 64 tons into orbit, doubling the lift capacity of the next closest operational vehicle, the Delta IV Heavy, at one-third the cost, the company said.
 
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From Cape Canaveral, GTO flights tend to leave the payload needing around 1800m/s of Δv before reaching its operational GEO orbit.

This payload was inserted on a 327km x 89815km x 22.96° super-synchronous GTO orbit. Which is the equivalent of a GTO-1502. Essentially, FH did the same job that Ariane 5 does for payloads when it launches from the equator in Kourou. But it did it from the Cape, and it did it while recovering the boosters, the core and the fairings.

This is some next gen stuff!

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From Cape Canaveral, GTO flights tend to leave the payload needing around 1800m/s of Δv before reaching its operational GEO orbit.

This payload was inserted on a 327km x 89815km x 22.96° super-synchronous GTO orbit. Which is the equivalent of a GTO-1502. Essentially, FH did the same job that Ariane 5 does for payloads when it launches from the equator in Kourou. But it did it from the Cape, and it did it while recovering the boosters, the core and the fairings.

This is some next gen stuff!

siv8y6arcrr21.jpg

Hmm..since it is reusable and can land back where it launched; it wouldn't be a stretch for them to consider shipping a set of these to an equatorial site.

Edit: Looks like they have done that in the past.
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Hmm..since it is reusable and can land back where it launched; it wouldn't be a stretch for them to consider shipping a set of these to an equatorial site.

It would be a pretty big stretch. The GSE needed to service a FH launch campaign is pretty substantial.
 
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I thought the PDF sages 'predicted' the end of the US space program because we hitched a few rides on the Russian rockets?
 
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I thought the PDF sages 'predicted' the end of the US space program because we hitched a few rides on the Russian rockets?

Also we won't have a Space Station in 2020 and we aren't allowed in the one China will build. Meanwhile their Long March 5 is still MIA and one SpaceX Starship will have more space than their entire station.

It would be a pretty big stretch. The GSE needed to service a FH launch campaign is pretty substantial.

Well when the BFR is proven it wouldn't surprise me if the US military buys 1 or 2 and basically goes into complete covert mode on some island. Also SpaceX investors could do a SPECTRE type installation on some island as they go asteroid mining. They can't drop huge payloads over populated areas.
 
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https://spacenews.com/arabsat-ceo-falcon-heavy-gives-our-satellite-extra-life/

Arabsat CEO: Falcon Heavy gives our satellite extra life

COLORADO SPRINGS — Arabsat chose SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket to launch its newest satellite in order to give the satellite a longer lifespan, Khalid Balkheyour, Arabsat’s chief executive, said in an interview with SpaceNews.

SpaceX’s launch of the Arabsat-6A communications satellite is scheduled for 6:35 p.m. Eastern from Space Launch Complex 39A in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Upper level winds in the atmosphere scrubbed yesterday’s launch attempt. The mission is SpaceX’s first with a commercial Falcon Heavy customer.

Saudi Arabia-based Arabsat announced plans to launch with SpaceX in spring 2015, but at the time hadn’t decided between the Falcon 9 or Falcon Heavy. The company selected Falcon Heavy in September for a mission anticipated in late 2017 or 2018.

Balkheyour said Arabsat chose the Falcon Heavy in order to extend the lifespan of the Arabsat-6A satellite beyond the 15 years a geostationary communications satellite is typically designed to last.

“We needed more lifetime for the satellite, so we had the option: Falcon 9 or Falcon Heavy, and we decided to go with Falcon Heavy,” he said.

Arabsat-6A is a large satellite, weighing 6,460-kilograms. Balkheyour said preliminary calculations show the satellite will get an extra boost from Falcon Heavy that should extend its life to between 18 and 20 years.

SpaceX experienced delays with the Falcon Heavy that pushed the Arabsat-6A launch to 2019, a setback Balkheyour said was upsetting, but tolerable.

“I don’t mind that as long as we get it right and in orbit with good quality checks and good health,” he said.

And the delays were not solely SpaceX. Arabsat-6A is just the second to use Lockheed Martin’s modernized LM2100 satellite platform, which features over two dozen upgrades, including new avionics, flexible solar arrays and a reprogrammable mission processor.

Arabsat was Lockheed Martin’s first customer for the LM2100, and while Balkheyour said Arabsat is impressed with the platform, it felt the need to conduct additional testing prior to launch.

“We were scheduled about a month ago, [but] we had to do more checks and quality assurance stuff with the satellite,” he said.

The first LM2100, SaudiGeoSat-1/Hellas Sat-4, launched in February on a European Ariane 5 from Arianespace.

Lockheed Martin has three other LM2100 satellites under construction: Japanese operator Sky Perfect JSAT’s Jcsat-17, and two SBIRS missile warning satellites for the U.S. Defense Department.

Balkheyour declined to say what Arabsat paid for the Falcon Heavy mission (SpaceX advertises Falcon Heavy launches as $90 million). He also declined to say the price of Arabsat’s two-satellite Lockheed Martin order, which at the time of announcement was estimated at $650 million.

Balkheyour was nonetheless positive on the contracts, saying the Falcon Heavy was a “good deal,” and that the Lockheed Martin satellites came at a “very attractive price.”

Balkheyour said Arabsat wasn’t afraid of trying new technologies on launch or manufacturing for the satellites.

“The two companies [SpaceX and Lockheed Martin] to us are very qualified, and we believed in them,” he said. “We had a good commercial team on both sides, so why not? We want to do something different.”

Arabsat-6A will take 16 to 17 days of orbit raising using its chemical propulsion system to reach its perch in geostationary orbit 36,000 kilometers above the Earth, Balkheyour said. From there the satellite will provide television broadcasting and internet connectivity services to customers in the Middle East, Africa and Europe.

Balkheyour estimated that 40 to 50 percent of the satellite’s capacity was presold prior to launch. Arabsat-6A carries Ku- and Ka-band transponders.

The launch will be the first for Falcon Heavy following its February 2018 demonstration flight carrying a red Tesla roadster. SpaceX has other commercial customers, including Viasat, Inmarsat and the U.S. military, for future Falcon Heavy missions. The launch will also influence the certification process for the U.S. Air Force to launch national security payloads using the rocket.

After the launch, barring a failure, Arabsat will have nine satellites in orbit — seven for its core fleet and two for its Greek subsidiary Hellas Sat. Balkheyour said Arabsat is designing another satellite now, and anticipates having a request for proposals ready for manufacturers by this fall.
 
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