Los Angeles Times

Small satellites fuel a niche f ield

Brokers coordinate ride-share missions amid ‘a steady stream’ of demand for launches of tiny craft.

- By Samantha Masunaga

Brokers coordinate ride-share missions amid “a steady stream” of demand for launches of tiny spacecraft.

For the first time, dozens of small satellites will ride atop a SpaceX rocket, as a Falcon 9 is scheduled to blast into orbit Sunday.

The 64 tiny satellites include one built by a Florida middle school to measure the viability of thawed bacteria and a Honeywell Aerospace demonstrat­or that will test new ship communicat­ion technology.

All 34 organizati­ons found their way onto the Falcon 9 rocket with the help of a sort of launch services broker — a relatively niche industry that has grown in tandem with the burgeoning small-satellite market.

Small-satellite start-ups sometimes have little experience buying launches from companies like Hawthorneb­ased SpaceX and France’s Arianespac­e, said Bill Ostrove, aerospace and defense analyst at Forecast Internatio­nal. At the same time, these launch service providers are looking for help to coordinate the deluge of developers looking to send small satellites into space, he said.

Sunday’s scheduled SpaceX launch is three years in the making for Seattlebas­ed Spacefligh­t, which bought the entire Falcon 9 rocket to accommodat­e its various customers. The launch will be Spacefligh­t’s first ride-share mission dedicated exclusivel­y to small satellites.

The purchase indicates that the small-satellite industry is “healthy and thriving,” said Kerri Cahoy, asso-

ciate professor of aeronautic­s and astronauti­cs at MIT.

“There’s a lot of new businesses … and a steady stream” of customers, Cahoy said. Being able to sell more than 60 spots on a rocket to customers is “impressive,” she said.

Spacefligh­t got its start about six years ago by helping customers test their small satellites, obtain the necessary launch and operating licenses before shipping the spacecraft to the launch site, and integrate them onto the rocket, said Curt Blake, Spacefligh­t president.

Typically, small satellites get to space by “piggybacki­ng” on the launch of a larger satellite and fitting in where there’s space on the rocket. The best-known example is a 2017 launch of the Indian space agency’s PSLV rocket, which deployed a 1,574pound satellite as well as 103 small satellites. A majority of those were Earth-imaging satellites made by San Francisco-based Planet Labs Inc.

While ride-sharing can be a more affordable way to reach orbit, it also means the tiny spacecraft are subject to the timing and orbit destinatio­n of the primary satellite.

There is now another way. Huntington Beach’s Rocket Lab has developed and launched its Electron rocket, which is designed specifical­ly to carry small satellites and to allow more flexibilit­y in time and orbit. A slew of other companies, including Long Beachbased Virgin Orbit and Tucson-based Vector, are working on their own small-satellite launchers.

Spacefligh­t negotiates with launch companies to find and purchase slots for their small-satellite customers. As more launch companies have come online, Spacefligh­t has increased its partnershi­ps to include some of the smaller rockets, such as the Electron and Virgin Orbit’s LauncherOn­e, which will air-launch satellites from beneath the wing of a modified Boeing 747.

“They serve different niches that our customers want,” Blake said.

The satellite launch broker industry is not large — analysts said there are only a handful of players, including Spacefligh­t. Business has been stable so far, though there is a chance launch companies could take those services in-house, Ostrove said.

“It certainly has a chance of being lucrative,” he said.

Spacefligh­t’s parent company, Spacefligh­t Industries Inc., has raised more than $200 million in total capital and counts firms such as the late Paul Allen’s Vulcan Capital as investors. Spacefligh­t Industries also has a subsidiary, BlackSky, that provides Earth-imaging data to customers.

In November, Spacefligh­t Industries filed an offering of $29.9 million in debt and other securities. The company said $22 million had already been sold, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Blake said he sees Spacefligh­t’s future in providing even more flexibilit­y in launch services and timing. The company now allows customers to move between rocket launches, though it charges a change fee.

“It really becomes more like an airline model,” he said.

Sunday’s launch is scheduled to occur at 10:32 a.m. from Vandenberg Air Force Base near Lompoc, Calif. This will mark the first time SpaceX uses a firststage booster that has flown twice before. If successful, it will be SpaceX’s 19th launch of the year, its highest annual launch total yet.

 ?? Craig Bailey Florida Today ?? A FALCON 9 lifts off from Kennedy Space Center. A Falcon 9 rocket will launch 64 small satellites Sunday.
Craig Bailey Florida Today A FALCON 9 lifts off from Kennedy Space Center. A Falcon 9 rocket will launch 64 small satellites Sunday.
 ?? Joe Burbank Orlando Sentinel ?? SPECTATORS at Florida’s Playalinda Beach watch the launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket last month.
Joe Burbank Orlando Sentinel SPECTATORS at Florida’s Playalinda Beach watch the launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States