Series of Argentinean commercial Earth observation satellites
NuSat
|
|
Mission type
| Commercial
Earth observation
|
---|
Operator
| Satellogic S.A.
|
---|
Website
| www
.satellogic
.com
|
---|
Mission duration
| 3 years (planned)
|
---|
|
|
|
Bus
| Small Satellite
|
---|
Manufacturer
| Satellogic
|
---|
Launch mass
| 38.5 kg (85 lb)
41 kg (NuSat 9-18)
|
---|
|
|
|
Launch date
| 30 May 2016
UTC
(1st, 2nd)
15 June 2017 (3rd)
2 February 2018 (4th, 5th)
15 January 2020 (7th, 8th)
2 September 2020 (6th)
6 November 2020 UTC (9th-18th)
30 June 2021 (19th-22nd)
1 April 2022 (23rd-27th)
25 May 2022 (28th-31st)
3 January 2023 (32nd-35th)
15 April 2023 (36th-39th)
12 June 2023 (40th-43rd)
|
---|
Rocket
| Long March 4B
,
Long March 2D
,
Vega
,
Long March 6
,
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
---|
Launch site
| Taiyuan
,
Jiuquan
,
Kourou
,
Cape Canaveral
|
---|
|
|
NuSat
satellite series (
Spanish
:
NuSat
, sometimes translated into English as
NewSat
), is a series of Argentinean commercial
Earth observation satellites
. They form the
Aleph-1
constellation, which is designed, built and operated by
Satellogic
.
Overview
[
edit
]
Satellites design
[
edit
]
The satellites in the constellation are identical 51 × 57 × 82 cm spacecraft of 38.5 kg (85 lb) mass. The satellites are equipped with an
imaging system
operating in
visible light
and
infrared
. The constellation will allow for commercially available real-time
Earth imaging
and video with a ground resolution of 1 m (3 ft 3 in). The satellites were developed based on the experience gained on the
BugSat 1
prototype satellite.
BugSat 1
[
edit
]
The
BugSat 1
(nickname Tita) was a technology demonstration mission for the NuSat satellites. It was launched on 19 June 2014 by a Russian
Dnepr
rocket. It was a
microsatellite
weighing 22 kg with outer dimensions of 27.5 × 50 × 50 cm. It also carried amateur radio capabilities.
Missions
[
edit
]
The Aleph-1 constellation will consist of more than 300 satellites. The first two satellites were launched as piggy-back payloads on a Chinese
Long March 4B
rocket in May 2016 from the
Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center
into a 500 km
Sun-synchronous orbit
with an inclination of 97.5°. The third satellite was launched as a piggy-back payload on a Long March 4B launch vehicle in June 2017. The fourth and fifth satellites were launched as piggy-backs on a
Long March 2D
rocket in February 2018. The sixth satellite was launched on a rideshare mission on a
Vega
rocket in September 2020. Satellites number seven and eight were launched as piggy-backs on a Long March 2D rocket in January 2020. Satellites number 9-18 were launched on a
Long March 6
launch vehicle
on 6 November 2020.
Ground communications
[
edit
]
An U/V transponder with 2 watts of output power for 8 GHz downlink and 2 GHz uplink will be operating on 100 kHz bandwidth.
LabOSat / MeMOSat payloads
[
edit
]
MeMOSat
, developed by the
LabOSat Group
, designed and built by a group of scientists at the
National Atomic Energy Commission
(
Spanish
:
Comision Nacional de Energia Atomica (CNEA)
), the
National Institute of Industrial Technology
(
Spanish
:
Instituto Nacional de Tecnologia Industrial (INTI)
), the
National University of General San Martin
(
Spanish
:
Universidad Nacional de San Martin (UNSAM)
) and
National Scientific and Technical Research Council
(CONICET).
This memory was specially designed to operate in harsh environments and adverse conditions, such as the strong radiation it must withstand in space. Its main objective is to test electronic components that will be commercialized in the future. To do this, the memory is made up of two metallic films with an oxide between about 20 nm thick, with electrical resistance properties, that can send information from the satellites, allowing to study their behavior in these hostile environments.
AMSAT payload
[
edit
]
Additionally, NuSat-1 carries a U/V linear transponder called LUSEX provided by
AMSAT Argentina
(AMSAT-LU) to offer services to the HAM community.
List of satellites
[
edit
]
Although the satellites are officially named "NuSat", each satellite has a nickname, a tradition from
Satellogic
that dates back since its very first satellite
Fresco
.
Name
[1]
|
Nickname
|
COSPAR
|
In homage to
|
Launch date
|
Launch vehicle
|
Outcome
|
Remarks
|
NuSat 1 (Aleph-1 1,
Lusat-OSCAR 87
, LO 87)
|
Fresco
|
2016-033B
|
Queso fresco
(Alongside Batata, they make the traditional Argentinian dessert "Fresco y Batata")
|
30 May 2016
|
Long March 4B
|
Success
|
First commercial small satellite from Argentina.
|
NuSat 2 (Aleph-1 2)
|
Batata
|
2016-033C
|
Dulce de batata
(Alongside Fresco, they make the traditional Argentinian dessert "Fresco y Batata")
|
30 May 2016
|
Long March 4B
|
Success
|
First commercial small satellite from Argentina.
|
NuSat 3 (Aleph-1 3)
|
Milanesat
|
2017-034C
|
Milanesa
|
15 June 2017
|
Long March 4B
|
Success
|
Nickname proposed by a
Reddit
user
[2]
|
NuSat 4 (Aleph-1 4)
|
Ada
[3]
|
2018-015D
|
Ada Lovelace
[4]
|
2 February 2018
[5]
[6]
|
Long March 2D
|
Success
[7]
|
|
NuSat 5 (Aleph-1 5)
|
Maryam
[3]
|
2018-015K
|
Maryam Mirzakhani
[4]
|
2 February 2018
[5]
[6]
|
Long March 2D
|
Success
[7]
|
|
NuSat 6 (Aleph-1 6)
|
Hypatia
[8]
|
2020-061A
|
Hypatia
|
3 September 2020
|
Vega
|
Success
[9]
|
|
NuSat 7 (Aleph-1 7)
|
Sophie
|
2020-003B
|
Sophie Germain
|
15 January 2020
|
Long March 2D
|
Success
[11]
|
|
NuSat 8 (Aleph-1 8)
|
Marie
|
2020-003C
|
Marie Curie
|
15 January 2020
|
Long March 2D
|
Success
[11]
|
|
NuSat 9 (Aleph-1 9)
|
Alice
[12]
|
2020-079A
|
Alice Ball
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 10 (Aleph-1 10)
|
Caroline
[12]
|
2020-079B
|
Caroline Herschel
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 11 (Aleph-1 11)
|
Cora
[12]
|
2020-079C
|
Cora Ratto
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 12 (Aleph-1 12)
|
Dorothy
[12]
|
2020-079D
|
Dorothy Vaughan
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 13 (Aleph-1 13)
|
Emmy
[12]
|
2020-079E
|
Emmy Noether
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 14 (Aleph-1 14)
|
Hedy
[12]
|
2020-079F
|
Hedy Lamarr
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 15 (Aleph-1 15)
|
Katherine
[12]
|
2020-079G
|
Katherine Johnson
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 16 (Aleph-1 16)
|
Lise
[12]
|
2020-079H
|
Lise Meitner
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 17 (Aleph-1 17)
|
Mary
[12]
|
2020-079J
|
Mary Jackson
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 18 (Aleph-1 18)
|
Vera
[12]
|
2020-079K
|
Vera Rubin
[13]
|
6 November 2020,
03:19 UTC
|
Long March 6
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 19 (Aleph-1 19)
|
Rosalind
[14]
|
2021-059AC
|
Rosalind Franklin
[14]
|
30 June 2021,
19:31 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 20 (Aleph-1 20)
|
Grace
[14]
|
2021-059AU
|
Grace Hopper
[14]
|
30 June 2021,
19:31 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
Decayed on 11 November 2023.
|
NuSat 21 (Aleph-1 21)
|
Elisa
[14]
|
2021-059AT
|
Elisa Bachofen
[14]
|
30 June 2021,
19:31 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
Decayed on 26 October 2023.
|
NuSat 22 (Aleph-1 22)
|
Sofya
[14]
|
2021-059AS
|
Sofya Kovalevskaya
[14]
|
30 June 2021,
19:31 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 23 (Aleph-1 23)
|
Annie Maunder
[15]
|
2022-033M
|
Annie Maunder
[15]
|
1 April 2022,
16:24 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 24 (Aleph-1 25)
|
Kalpana Chawla
[15]
|
2022-033X
|
Kalpana Chawla
[15]
|
1 April 2022,
16:24 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 25 (Aleph-1 25)
|
Maria Telkes
[15]
|
2022-033Q
|
Maria Telkes
[15]
|
1 April 2022,
16:24 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 26 (Aleph-1 26)
|
Mary Somerville
[15]
|
2022-033
|
Mary Somerville
[15]
|
1 April 2022,
16:24 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat 27 (Aleph-1 27)
|
Sally Ride
[15]
|
2022-033R
|
Sally Ride
[15]
|
1 April 2022,
16:24 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-28 (Aleph-1 28)
|
Alice Lee
[16]
|
2022-057R
|
Alice Lee
|
25 May 2022,
18:35 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-29 (Aleph-1 29)
|
Edith Clarke
[16]
|
2022-057AJ
|
Edith Clarke
|
25 May 2022,
18:35 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-30 (Aleph-1 30)
|
Margherita Hack
[16]
|
2022-057S
|
Margherita Hack
|
25 May 2022,
18:35 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-31 (Aleph-1 31)
|
Ruby Payne-Scott
[16]
|
2022-057W
|
Ruby Payne-Scott
|
25 May 2022,
18:35 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-32 (Aleph-1 32)
|
Albania-1
[17]
|
2023-001BH
|
|
3 January 2023,
14:56 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
First Albanian satellites, developed in collaboration with the Albanian government
|
NuSat-33 (Aleph-1 33)
|
Albania-2
[17]
|
2023-001AQ
|
|
3 January 2023,
14:56 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
NuSat-34 (Aleph-1 34)
|
Amelia Earhart
[17]
|
2023-001AN
|
Amelia Earhart
|
3 January 2023,
14:56 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-35 (Aleph-1 35)
|
Williamina Fleming
[17]
|
2023-001AR
|
Williamina Fleming
|
3 January 2023,
14:56 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-36 (Aleph-1 36)
|
Annie Jump Cannon
[18]
|
2023-054N
|
Annie Jump Cannon
|
15 April 2023,
06:48 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-37 (Aleph-1 37)
|
Joan Clarke
[18]
|
2023-054AB
|
Joan Clarke
|
15 April 2023,
06:48 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-38 (Aleph-1 38)
|
Maria Gaetana Agnesi
[18]
|
2023-054AA
|
Maria Gaetana Agnesi
|
15 April 2023,
06:48 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-39 (Aleph-1 39)
|
Tikvah Alper
[18]
|
2023-054Z
|
Tikvah Alper
|
15 April 2023,
06:48 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-40 (Aleph-1 40)
|
Carolyn Shoemaker
[19]
|
2023-084M
|
Carolyn S. Shoemaker
|
12 June 2023,
21:35 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-41 (Aleph-1 41)
|
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
[19]
|
2023-084N
|
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
|
12 June 2023,
21:35 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-42 (Aleph-1 42)
|
Maria Wonenburger
[19]
|
2023-084AL
|
Maria Wonenburger
|
12 June 2023,
21:35 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-43 (Aleph-1 43)
|
Rose Dieng-Kuntz
[19]
|
2023-084AN
|
Rose Dieng-Kuntz
|
12 June 2023,
21:35 UTC
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
NuSat-44 (Aleph-1 44)
|
Maria Mitchell
|
|
Maria Mitchell
|
4 March 2024
|
Falcon 9 Block 5
|
Success
|
|
Gallery
[
edit
]
-
Mauricio Macri
alongside Satellogic directives after the launch of Fresco and Batata
-
Buenos Aires
as seen from one of the NuSat satellites
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"NuSat 1, ..., 98 (NewSat 1, ..., 98, Aleph-1 1, ..., 98)"
.
- ^
"Tenes ganas de elegir el nombre del proximo satelite argentino? ? r/argentina"
.
reddit
(in Spanish). 29 August 2016
. Retrieved
15 June
2017
.
- ^
a
b
Kargieman, Emiliano [@earlkman] (4 August 2017).
"Notice: satellite inside. Two more hit the road: Ada and Maryam soon taking their ride to LEO https://t.co/CklFZoAOP0"
(
Tweet
)
. Retrieved
11 January
2021
– via
Twitter
.
- ^
a
b
Jack, Federico [@fedejack] (4 August 2017).
"@nwolovick @Juandedeboca @earlkman Si!"
(
Tweet
)
. Retrieved
11 January
2021
– via
Twitter
.
- ^
a
b
Satellogic [@Satellogic]
(11 January 2018).
"Next Feb 2nd we are launching 2 new satellites called Ada & Maryam. Be the first one to check… https://t.co/AC3wRZwKyn"
(
Tweet
)
. Retrieved
11 January
2021
– via
Twitter
.
- ^
a
b
Jones, Andrew.
"China launches seismo-electromagnetic probe along with ESA, Danish and commercial CubeSats"
. GB Times. Archived from
the original
on 2 February 2018
. Retrieved
2 February
2018
.
- ^
a
b
Satellogic [@Satellogic]
(2 February 2018).
"Sucessfull [sic] launch ??. Ada & Maryam are talking to us! ???? #hayBeacons #adaymaryam #adalovelace #maryammirzakhani #satellites"
(
Tweet
)
. Retrieved
11 January
2021
– via
Twitter
.
- ^
Satellogic [@Satellogic]
(3 March 2020).
"Next March 24 at 01:51:10 UTC we are launching a new satellite called Hypatia. Take a look at our new mission patch. ????? #satellites #hypatia #satellogic https://t.co/RHfYYJEQ1B"
(
Tweet
)
. Retrieved
11 January
2021
– via
Twitter
.
- ^
Clark, Stephen (2 September 2020).
"Vega rocket launches with 53 small satellites"
. Spaceflight Now
. Retrieved
3 September
2020
.
- ^
a
b
Clark, Stephen.
"Argentine smallsats hitch ride with Chinese payloads on Long March rocket"
. Spaceflight Now
. Retrieved
16 January
2020
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
"Ten Satellogic Earth-imaging satellites successfully launched"
. Spaceflight Now. 6 November 2020
. Retrieved
8 November
2020
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
"Post-Launch Report"
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
"Satellogic Launches 4 Additional Satellites on SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket"
.
Business Wire
. 30 June 2021
. Retrieved
1 July
2021
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
"Satellogic Launches Five Additional Satellites on SpaceX Transporter-4 Mission"
.
Satellogic
(Press release). 4 April 2022
. Retrieved
14 April
2022
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"Satellogic Announces Successful SpaceX Launch Of Four Additional Satellites"
.
Satnews
. 26 May 2022.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"Satellogic's Aleph-1 constellation expanded with four smallsat deployments via the Transporter-6 rideshare mission"
.
SatNews
. 4 January 2023
. Retrieved
5 January
2023
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Lentz, Danny (15 April 2023).
"SpaceX Transporter-7 launches 51 payloads, booster return to LZ"
.
NASASpaceFlight
. Retrieved
15 April
2023
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Lentz, Danny (12 June 2023).
"SpaceX Transporter-8 launches 72 payloads marking 200th booster landing"
. Retrieved
15 June
2023
.
External links
[
edit
]
|
---|
January
| |
---|
February
| |
---|
March
| |
---|
April
| |
---|
May
| |
---|
June
| |
---|
July
| |
---|
August
| |
---|
September
| |
---|
October
| |
---|
November
| |
---|
December
|
- Progress MS-04
- Gokturk-1
- Resourcesat-2A
- WGS-8
- HTV-6
/
Kounotori 6
, (
EGG, TuPOD, UBAKUSAT, AOBA-VELOX, STARS, FREEDOM, ITF, Waseda-SAT, OSNSAT,
Tancredo-1
, TechEDSat,
Lemur-2
× 4
)
- Fengyun 4A
- CYGNSS
× 8
- EchoStar 19
- Arase
/ ERG
- TanSat
,
Spark
× 2
- Star One D1
,
JCSAT-15
- SuperView
/ Gaojing-1 01, 02,
Bayi Kepu
1
|
---|
Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
|
|
---|
January
| |
---|
February
| |
---|
March
| |
---|
April
| |
---|
May
| |
---|
June
|
- QZS-2
- ViaSat-2
,
Eutelsat 172B
- Dragon CRS-11
(
NICER
,
BRAC Onnesha
,
GhanaSat-1
,
Mazaalai
,
Nigeria EduSat-1
)
- GSAT-19
- EchoStar 21
- Progress MS-06
- HXMT / Insight
,
NuSat 3
- ChinaSat 9A
- Cartosat-2E
,
Max Valier Sat
,
Aalto-1
,
Blue Diamond
,
Green Diamond
,
Red Diamond
,
CICERO-6
,
COMPASS-2
,
InflateSail
,
Lemur-2
× 8
,
LituanicaSAT-2
,
ROBUSTA-1B
- Kosmos 2519
/ Nivelir,
Kosmos 2521
/ Sputnik Inspektor
- BulgariaSat-1
- Iridium NEXT
× 10
- EuropaSat / Hellas Sat 3
,
GSAT-17
|
---|
July
| |
---|
August
| |
---|
September
| |
---|
October
| |
---|
November
| |
---|
December
| |
---|
Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
|
|
---|
January
|
- USA-280 / Zuma
- BeiDou-3
M7
,
BeiDou-3
M8
- Cartosat-2F
,
ICEYE-X1
,
Microsat-TD
,
Arkyd-6A
,
Carbonite-2
,
Flock-3p'
× 4
,
Fox-1D
,
Landmapper BC 3 v2
,
Lemur-2
× 4
,
PicSat
,
SpaceBEE
× 4
- USA-281
/
Topaz-5
- Jilin-1 Video-07
,
Jilin-1 Video-08
,
Kepler 0 KIPP
- USA-282
/
SBIRS-GEO-4
- Humanity Star
,
Dove Pioneer
,
Lemur-2
× 2
- Yaogan 30-04
(3 satellites)
- SES-14
,
Al Yah 3
- GovSat-1 / SES-16
|
---|
February
| |
---|
March
| |
---|
April
| |
---|
May
| |
---|
June
| |
---|
July
| |
---|
August
| |
---|
September
| |
---|
October
| |
---|
November
| |
---|
December
|
- Soyuz MS-11
- SHERPA
,
Blacksky Global 2
,
Capella 1
,
ESEO
,
Eu:CROPIS
,
FalconSAT 6
,
ICEYE X2
,
SkySat 14
,
SkySat 15
,
STPSat 5
,
ENOCH
,
Flock-3s
× 3
,
IRVINE02
,
Landmapper BC 4
,
MinXSS-2
,
Orbital Reflector
,
PW-Sat 2
,
SpaceBEE
× 3
- GSAT-11
,
GEO-KOMPSAT
2A
- SpaceX CRS-16
(
TechEdSat 8
,
UNITE
)
- Chang'e 4
(
Yutu-2
)
- CubeSail
,
RSat-P
,
STF-1
- GSAT-7A
- CSO-1
- Kosmos 2533
/
Blagovest
-13L
- USA-289
/
GPS IIIA
-01
- Kanopus-V
No. 5, No. 6,
Flock-3k
× 12
,
Lemur-2
× 8
,
Lume-1
- Yunhai-2 01
(6 satellites)
|
---|
Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
|
|
---|
January
| |
---|
February
| |
---|
March
| |
---|
April
| |
---|
May
| |
---|
June
| |
---|
July
| |
---|
August
| |
---|
September
|
- ION-SCV 001
(
Flock-4v
× 12
),
NuSat 6
,
UPM-Sat 2
,
Flock-4v
× 14
,
Lemur-2
× 8
,
NAPA-1
,
SpaceBEE
× 12
- Starlink V1.0-L11
(60 satellites)
- Chongfu Shiyong Shiyan Hangtian Qi
- Gaofen 11-02
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-02C
†
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03B
× 6,
Jilin-1 Gaofen-03C
× 3
- HaiYang 2C
- Huanjing 2A
,
Huanjing 2B
- Gonets-M
× 3,
ICEYE X6
,
ICEYE X7
,
Kepler 4
,
Kepler 5
,
LacunaSat-3
,
Lemur-2
× 4
|
---|
October
| |
---|
November
| |
---|
December
| |
---|
Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
|
|
---|
January
|
- Turksat 5A
- PICS 1
,
PICS 2
,
Q-PACE
,
TechEdSat-7
- Tiantong-1 03
- Starlink V1.0-L16
(60 satellites)
- Starlink v1.0 R1
(10 satellites),
ION-SCV 002
(
Flock-4s × 8
,
SpaceBEE
× 12
),
Capella 3
,
Capella 4
,
ICEYE
× 3,
Hawk
× 3,
Astrocast
× 5
,
Flock-4s
× 40
,
HYPSO-1
,
Kepler
× 8
,
Lemur-2
× 8
,
PTD-1
,
SpaceBEE
× 24
- Yaogan 31-02
(3 satellites)
|
---|
February
| |
---|
March
| |
---|
April
| |
---|
May
| |
---|
June
|
- Fengyun 4B
- SpaceX CRS-22
- SXM-8
- USA-316
,
USA-317
,
USA-318
- Shenzhou 12
- USA-319
/
GPS IIIA
-
05
- Yaogan 30-09
(3 satellites)
- Kosmos 2550
/ Pion-NKS №1
- Progress MS-17
- Brik-II
,
STORK-4
,
STORK-5
- Starlink V1.0-R2
(3 satellites),
ION-SCV 003
(
SPARTAN
),
SHERPA FX2
(
Lynk 05
,
Astrocast
× 5
,
Lemur-2
× 3
,
SpaceBEE
× 12
),
SHERPA LTE1
(
KSF1
× 4
),
Capella 5
,
ICEYE
× 4,
Hawk
× 3,
NuSat
× 4,
Lemur-2
× 3
,
LINCS A
,
LINCS B
,
SpaceBEE
× 12
,
SpaceBEE NZ
× 4
,
Tiger-2
,
TROPICS Pathfinder
|
---|
July
| |
---|
August
| |
---|
September
| |
---|
October
| |
---|
November
| |
---|
December
| |
---|
Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
|
|
---|
January
|
- Starlink G4-5
(49 satellites)
- ION-SCV 004
(
LabSat
,
STORK-1
,
STORK-2
,
SW1FT
),
Capella 7
,
Capella 8
,
ICEYE X14
,
ICEYE X16
,
USA-320
,
USA-321
,
USA-322
,
USA-323
,
DEWA SAT-1
,
Flock 4x
× 44,
Kepler
× 4,
Lemur-2
× 5,
Nepal PQ-1
- Lemur-2
Krywe
,
STORK-3
,
TechEdSat-13
,
Unicorn-1
,
Unicorn-2
× 4
- Shiyan 13
- Starlink G4-6
(49 satellites)
- USA-324
/
GSSAP-5
,
USA-325
/
GSSAP-6
- CSG-2
|
---|
February
| |
---|
March
| |
---|
April
| |
---|
May
|
- SpaceBEE
× 16,
SpaceBEE NZ
× 8,
Unicorn-2F
- Jilin-1 Kuanfu-01C
,
Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D
× 7
- Starlink G4-17
(53 satellites)
- Tianzhou 4
- Jilin-1 Mofang-01A
†
- Starlink G4-13
(53 satellites)
- Starlink G4-15
(53 satellites)
- Starlink G4-18
(53 satellites)
- Kosmos 2556
/ Bars-M 3L
- Boe OFT-2
- ION-SCV 006
(
SBUDNIC
),
SHERPA AC1
,
Vigoride-3
,
ICEYE
× 5,
NuSat
× 4,
Lemur-2
× 5,
Platform 1
,
PTD-3
|
---|
June
| |
---|
July
| |
---|
August
| |
---|
September
| |
---|
October
| |
---|
November
|
- LDPE-2
,
USA-339
/ Shepherd Demonstration,
USA-340
,
USA-341
,
USA-344
/ USUVL
- Kosmos 2563
/
EKS-6
- Hotbird 13G
- MATS
- ChinaSat 19
- Cygnus NG-18
(
SpaceTuna1
)
- NOAA-21
,
LOFTID
- Yunhai-3 01
- Tianzhou 5
- Galaxy 31
,
Galaxy 32
- Yaogan 34-03
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D
× 5
- Artemis 1
(
ArgoMoon
,
BioSentinel
,
CuSP
,
EQUULEUS
,
LunaH-Map
,
Lunar IceCube
,
LunIR
,
Near-Earth Asteroid Scout
,
OMOTENASHI
,
Team Miles
)
- Eutelsat 10B
- EOS-06 /
Oceansat-3
,
Astrocast
× 4
- SpaceX CRS-26
- Yaogan 36-03
(3 satellites)
- Kosmos 2564
/
GLONASS-M
761
- Shenzhou 15
- Kosmos 2565
/ Lotos-S1 №6 (
Kosmos 2566
)
- Oceansat-3
|
---|
December
| |
---|
Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
|
|
---|
January
|
- ION SCV-007 & 008
(
Astrocast
× 4),
Orbiter SN1
† (
Unicorn-2G
†,
Unicorn-2H
†),
Vigoride-5
,
ICEYE
× 3,
Lynk Tower 03
,
Lynk Tower 04
,
NuSat
× 4,
Flock 4y
× 36,
KSF3
× 4,
Gama Alpha
,
Lemur-2
× 6,
Milspace-2 1
,
MilSpace-2 2
,
Platform 2
,
SpaceBEE
× 12,
- Shijian 23
- AMAN
†,
CIRCE 1
†,
CIRCE 2
†,
ForgeStar-0
†,
Prometheus 2A
†,
Prometheus 2B
†,
STORK-6
†
- OneWeb L16
(40 satellites)
- Apstar 6E
- Yaogan 37
,
Shiyan 22A
,
Shiyan 22B
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D 34
,
Jilin-1 Hongwai-01A
× 2,
Jilin-1 Mofang-02A
× 3
- LDPE-3A
,
USA-342
/ CBAS-2
- USA-343
/
GPS III-06
- Starlink G2-4
(51 satellites)
- Hawk
× 3
- IGS-Radar 7
- Starlink G5-2
(56 satellites)
- Starlink G2-6
(49 satellites),
ION SCV-009
|
---|
February
| |
---|
March
| |
---|
April
|
- SDA Transport Layer Tranche 0 × 8
,
SDA Tracking Layer Tranche 0 × 2
- Intelsat 40e
/
TEMPO
- JUICE
- ION SCV-010
(
Kepler-20
,
Kepler-21
),
Vigoride-6
,
Hawk
× 3,
?MECE
,
NuSat
× 4,
Brokkr-1
,
DEWA SAT-2
,
LacunaSat-2F
,
Lemur-2
× 3, Sateliot_0 /
Platform 3
,
TAIFA-1
- Fengyun 3G
- Starlink G6-2
(21 satellites)
- Starlink G3-5
(46 satellites)
- O3b mPOWER 3
,
O3b mPOWER 4
|
---|
May
| |
---|
June
|
- Starlink G6-4
(22 satellites)
- SpaceX CRS-28
(
Maya-5
,
Maya-6
)
- Shiyan 24A
,
Shiyan 24B
- Starlink G5-11
(52 satellites)
- ION SCV-011
(
Unicorn-2I
),
Orbiter SN3
,
Blackjack Aces
× 4,
ICEYE
× 4,
NuSat
× 4,
GEISAT
,
Lemur-2
× 3,
MISR-A
,
MISR-B
,
SpaceBEE
× 12,
Tiger-4
,
XVI
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D
× 8,
Jilin-1 Gaofen-06A
× 30,
Jilin-1 Pingtai-02A
× 2
- SATRIA
- Shiyan 25
- Starlink G5-7
(47 satellites)
- USA-345
/
Orion 11
- Starlink G5-12
(56 satellites)
- Meteor-M №2-3
|
---|
July
| |
---|
August
| |
---|
September
| |
---|
October
| |
---|
November
|
- TJS-10
- Starlink G6-26
(23 satellites)
- Starlink G6-27
(23 satellites)
- ChinaSat 6E
- SpaceX CRS-29
- ION SCV-015
(
Lemur-2 NANAZ
,
OSW Cazorla
,
Unicorn-2J
,
Unicorn-2K
),
Aether-1
,
Aether-2
,
FalconSAT-X
,
ICEYE
× 4,
Pelican-1
,
B1B2 Barry
,
Flock-4q
× 36,
Lemur-2
× 10,
PEARL-1C
,
PEARL-1H
,
Platform 5
,
STORK-7 / Aman-1
- O3b mPOWER 5
,
O3b mPOWER 6
- Haiyang-3A
- Starlink G6-28
(23 satellites)
- Starlink G7-7
(22 satellites)
- Malligyong-1 F3
- Starlink G6-29
(23 satellites)
- Kosmos 2572
/ Razdan 1
- Starlink G6-30
(23 satellites)
|
---|
December
| |
---|
Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
|