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SpaceX Delays Launch of Rideshare Mission on Falcon 9 Rocket

SpaceX Delays Launch of Rideshare Mission on Falcon 9 Rocket
SpaceX Delays Launch of Rideshare Mission on Falcon 9 Rocket

SpaceX has delayed its next mission to allow for more prelaunch checkouts. 
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket was scheduled to launch the mission, called Transporter-2 on Friday. Instead, SpaceX is now targeting a new launch date that should be announced soon. 
"Team is taking additional time for pre-launch checkouts ahead of the transporter-2 mission," the company tweeted on Thursday, Space.com reported.
The Falcon 9 first stage featured in this launch is one of SpaceX's veterans — a booster dubbed B1060. 
Embarking on its eighth mission, B1060 has carried five different Starlink internet satellite payloads, an upgraded GPS satellite for the US Space Force, as well as a communications satellite for Turkey. 
For its next act, the Falcon 9 will ferry dozens of satellites into space as part of the company's second dedicated rideshare mission. SpaceX's first rideshare flight, Transporter-1, launched in January, carried 143 small satellites — a new record for a single rocket. 
Acting as a cosmic carpool, SpaceX sent the bevy of small satellites into space alongside 10 of its own Starlink internet satellites. 
The mission deposited the flat-paneled Starlink satellites in a unique polar orbit — a first for its broadband fleet that will help provide coverage to customers in Alaska and other polar regions.
Transporter-2 won't be breaking any records with the number of satellites tucked inside its payload fairing, as this mission is expected to carry around 88 spacecraft, also into a polar orbit. 
Tucked inside the rocket's nose cone is a whole host of small satellites, including payloads for the US military, plus radar and optical Earth observation satellites for Satellogic and ICEYE, which are commercial remote sensing companies out of Argentina and Finland. 
There are also numerous CubeSats on board.
Team is taking additional time for pre-launch checkouts ahead of the Transporter-2 mission and will announce new target launch date once confirmed.
The first stage booster will also deviate from the traditional drone ship landing, and touch down on Landing Zone 1 here at the Cape, marking the first land landing of the year. 
The flight marks SpaceX's 20th launch of the year and the third to use the polar corridor since August 2020 — a flight path that hadn't been used since the 1960s. 
SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket is the first to be equipped with an automated flight termination system (FTS), which allows them to use the polar launch corridor. In the future, all new launch vehicles will be equipped with the same automated FTS. 
SpaceX expects to announce a new launch date soon. 
 

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