Page 4 - Spec Tech Vol 1 Issue 04
P. 4

Rocket Lab launches radar satellite to orbit on


         30th Electron mission

























         A Rocket Lab Electron rocket carrying the Strix-1 radar satellite launches from a pad on Mahia Peninsula, New Zealand on Sept. 15, 2022 EDT
         (Sept. 16 local time). (Image credit: Rocket Lab)



         Rocket Lab's 30th Electron rocket sent a commercial radar satellite soaring to Earth orbit
         Thursday (Sept. 15).
         The Electron booster lifted off from Rocket Lab's New Zealand site on the North Island's Mahia
         Peninsula on Thursday at 4:38 p.m. EDT (Local time Friday, Sept. 16).

         The livestreamed launch of the Strix-1 satellite on behalf of Synspective showed the rocket flying
         into the blue sky, with no technical issues reported during the launch. Strix-1 was deployed into
         its designated orbit, 350 miles (563 kilometers) above Earth, about 53 minutes after lift-off as
         planned, Rocket Lab said in an update via Twitter.

         Thursday's mission was called "The Owl Spreads Its Wings," a nod to the Strix-1 payload.
         (Strix is a diverse and widespread genus of owls.)
         "Strix-1 is Synspective's first commercial satellite for its synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite
         constellation to deliver imagery that can detect millimeter-level changes to the Earth's surface
         from space, independent of weather conditions on Earth and at any time of the day or night,"
         Rocket Lab officials wrote in a mission description.

         Rocket Lab also successfully lofted Strix satellites for Synspective in December
         2020 and February 2022. Those missions were named with owl themes as well.
         Rocket Lab officials framed this launch as a milestone mission: It was Rocket Lab's 30th Electron
         launch, bringing its 150th satellite into space and flying its 300th Rutherford engine.

         The flight also followed Rocket Lab's successful launch of NASA's CAPSTONE probe to the
         moon. In addition, the company aims to send one or more life-hunting missions to Venus in the
         coming years.

         Rocket Lab plans to make the first stage of Electron fully reusable, and has successfully fired up
         a booster recovered (and inadvertently dunked in the ocean) with a helicopter on May 2, during a
         mission called "There and Back Again."

         The company did not attempt a recovery on Thursday's launch, however, and Electron's first
         stage fell naturally into the Ocean after engine cut-off.



         Space Explorer 2022                                                                                                                                                    4
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