SpaceX Successfully Launches Its First Spy Satellite (arstechnica.com)
SpaceX successfully launched NROL-76, a classified U.S. intelligence mission, from NASA's Kennedy Space Center Monday. Sunday's launch attempt was scrubbed due to a sensor issue. From a report: Not much is known about the National Reconnaissance Office's NROL-76 satellite, a classified payload, which will liftoff into low Earth orbit from Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Song 2
The 1st stage landed at LZ1 again. I believe this was a new booster on this launch (as opposed to a "flight proven" stage).
These landing are becoming so routine that it's almost boring. Almost.
Also,the live feed this time around showed a ground based view of the first stage from launch, to separation, to boost back burn, to landing. Some very long stretches of single shots. Clear weather made for a very interesting perspective!
'new'.
Care to retry that with a more accurate adjective?
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
You mightn't be aware, but ULA has been aggressively driving down the launch costs on the Atlas V. It's still not as cheap as Falcon 9, but it is a lot cheaper than it was a few years ago. Atlas V also has a much better reliability track record than F9 does and has fewer launch delays, which is worth something to the people with very expensive satellites.
They are also working on a new rocket named Vulcan to reduce costs even further. There is only so much they can do however because their profits are fed back into the 2 companies that own ULA, instead of being purely spent on R&D for their own improvement. They are making profit for the companies that own them, effectively trying to swim with an anchor around their neck.
I haven't bough anything from Tesla in my life, but I don't think he gets the message.
Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
Elon Musk then can have has stuff taken when we go to work and government takes his stuff over.
So you are proposing that a business refuse to service a customer because they don't support their lifestyle.
I would say that's kind of stupid, but there are plenty of complacent, "nothing to hide" kind of people that don't care about privacy anyway.
As with anything else, launch costs are driven down by free application of technology in a competitive market, not by whoever happens to be ahead at the moment.
So anything less than perfection is a failure. Gotcha.
Dude, come on. They have the BEST reuse of rocket parts of any flying rocket on the planet. That's sad?
Plus, at least with the previous launch, they are recovering that fairings. And there are plans for 2nd stage recovery, but that's a ways off.
Weaponized? Why do you say that?
This was a classified mission, but no payload details. Do you have access to some classified information that we don't?
Don't spread rumors if all you have is FUD.
Atlas has a great record, but then it's the result of decades of experience and government contracts. SpaceX have under a decade of launch experience.
And Boeing and Lockheed are really struggling due to the military being so careful about defence spending. Yeah, that business must be a real millstone...
Wow, way to go with the total lack of sense of humour!!
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
spy satellites are only a problem if you go outdoors. So this affects 0 people on slashdot.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
yeah, they will. Because the government pays good money and once you get into the circle of trust it's a nice flow of cash to build the business
They only recovered the first stage. All the rest wasted. SAD!
Funny, but the truth is that everybody at SpaceX agrees with this!
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
no, I am VERY aware.
Bruno cut the old upper management and now has brought in his cronies and pays them MORE. So, to pay for that, he is cutting engineers at a frightening rate.
Those engineers are needed for ACE and other launch vehicles. In particular, capturing the engines from vulcan and then rebuilding a new rocket is just looney tunes.
As to the safety record of Atlas V vs F9, that is true. The Atlas V has had 1 partial failure. The F9 has 1 partial and 1 failed launch, which is 1 more than Atlas. They DID have an explosion on the pad, but that was not during a launch. The fact that the payload was on there, was the fault of the customers, who INSISTED that it be there.
As to delays, not a big deal. RIght now,they appear to be launching at the rate of 1.5-2 / month. In addition, it appears that they will be launching 3 / month towards the end of this year. OTOH, ULA has never launched more than 1 / month, and less than 11 / year. Not that impressive.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
They need to design ICBM stages that land so they can be reused in our next nuclear conflict.
Just not a very useful one. ICBMs need to be launched at a moment's notice. No time to fuel them up before launch.
Yes, there is no cause for alarm when the spy agencies and billionaires get together with the military industrial complex to do things that must be kept absolutely secret from the American people. I feel so much calmer now. Move along, nothing to see here.
A brain is a terrible thing to waste... Mind? That's debatable.
If SpaceX gets up to the launch cadence they want, I suspect the locals will start to get mad the sonic booms of landings... (listen here: https://youtu.be/ApH_mRXwpT0?t... or here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...)
OK I was going to write something funny and stupid, but when I looked up the Wiki page for some additional information I found something much more interesting. They make a launch patch seemingly for every single launch, of which there have been a lot! Some are hilarious, others sort of menacingly inappropriate, others just cool artwork. Honestly some of them could be a bit more ambiguous if they are supposed to be "classified" spy satellites... I mean when your patch is a sailing ship with an angry looking eye over top, I mean people can guess the purpose... Also did they all go to evil art school? Apparently not all of them, because some look like they were designed by a 10 year old and MS paint. Interesting to look at anyway!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
So we're going to start seeing a lot of Elon, who is going to start letting his fingernails grow and collecting his urine in bottles?
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
...and sterilizing Campbell's soup cans before opening them and watching old movies over and over, and... yes.
A brain is a terrible thing to waste... Mind? That's debatable.
That's funny.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
The launch was for NRO, National Reconaissance Office, they,
Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds