Five rockets will live in just 20 hours, so February 4 may be one of the busiest days in the cosmic sector. This event contains four different space organizations, transmitting communication satellites and starting government payload.
According to Space.com, if these launches proceed as planned, they will be recorded as the best release in one day. SPACEX has already launched a Batch of Starlink Internet satellite from the Cape Kana Bellal Space Force Station in Florida at 2:07 pm today.
Next is the new Shepherd Rocket of Blue Origin, part of the NS-29 non-WED research mission. This was scheduled to be released last week on 30 payloads, but was canceled due to bad weather and rockets.
Rocket Lab also plans to launch an electronic rocket from New Zealand launch complex 1. This is part of the “IoT 4 You and Me” mission and carries five satellites for a French company named Kineis. I will take off at 2:13 am tomorrow.
ELON MUSK’S SPACEX plans to send a pair of Maxar Technology WorldView Legion Satellites to space from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. These satellites are the last 10 Maxar satellite groups designed to imagine the rapidly changing territory of the earth. Live streaming on the SPACEX page at 4:20 am tomorrow and is scheduled to be released at 4:37 am.
Roscosmos of the Russian Space Organization will launch unknown payload from PLESETSK COSMODROME. The classified payload will be released from the Soyuz 2.1V/VOLGA rocket site 43 tomorrow at 8:30 am.
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