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Space Coast’s dry spell ending

Spacex to send about 60 Starlink satellites to orbit Monday

- By Chabeli Herrera Want more space news? Follow Go For Launch on Facebook. Contact the reporter at ch err era@ orlando sentinel .com or 407-420-5660; Twitter @ChabeliH

Spacex is set to end a three-month dry spell of ground-based launches from the Space Coast on Monday with a planned launch of its Internet satellite constellat­ion.

Scheduled to launch about 9:55 a.m. from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station’s launch complex 40, a Falcon 9 rocket will carry about 60 satellites into orbit. Called Starlink, the satellites are part of what could one day be a constellat­ion numbering thousands of spacecraft in Lowearth orbit providing lower-cost Internet connectivi­ty, even in remote areas of the globe.

Monday’s launch will be Spacex’s second for Starlink. The company sent the first 60 Starlink satellites into space in late May.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission has approved Spacex for about 12,000 satellites within its Starlink constellat­ion. Spacex will need about 12 launches of 60 satellites each to reach moderate global connectivi­ty.

Earlier this year, the company said it was hoping to start increasing its cadence of launches to as many as six Starlink launches by the end of 2019, allowing it to offer continuous coverage of the planet’s most populated regions sooner. But that dream hasn’t yet been realized.

It’s unclear how many more Starlink missions Spacex may be able to squeeze in before the end of the year.

In September, Spacex president Gwynne Shotwell said the company hopes to have up to 24 Starlink launches in 2020.

If the complex endeavor, which CEO Elon Musk called “one of the hardest engineerin­g projects” he’s ever seen, is successful, it could help Spacex raise the capital it needs to fund developing more advanced and reusable rockets.

As it is, next week’s Starlink launch will be another push into Spacex’s goal of full reusabilit­y.

It’ll be the first launch that reuses a payload fairing — the two-piece shell that holds the satellites for deployment. The fairing that will be used in the Starlink launch was caught for the first time by Spacex’s “Ms. Tree,” a recovery vessel with a built-in net, after a June Falcon Heavy launch from the Space Coast.

It’ll also be the first launch that’ll reuse a booster for the fourth time.

So far, some of Starlink’s capabiliti­es have been put to the test. Musk showed off the satellites’ connectivi­ty last month, when he tweeted “Sending this tweet through space via Starlink satellite.”

When the message successful­ly went through, Musk followed up with another tweet: “Whoa, it worked!!”

 ?? SPACEX ?? Spacex is planning its next launch of Starlink satellites from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Nov. 11.
SPACEX Spacex is planning its next launch of Starlink satellites from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Nov. 11.

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