Blue Origin is honored that Telesat has selected our powerful New Glenn rocket to launch Telesat’s innovative LEO satellite constellation into space. We are excited to be partnering with this industry leader on their disruptive satellite network architecture. New Glenn’s 7-meter fairing, with its huge mass and volume capabilities, is a perfect match for Telesat’s constellation plans while reducing launch costs per satellite. Bob Smith, Blue Origin CEO
A Falcon 9 from pad 39A is slated to launch the first Crew Dragon space capsule on an uncrewed demonstration mission, DM-1, to the ISS on March 2 at the earliest, at 2:45am EST if that day.
https://www.spaceconnectonline.com.au/manufacturing/3169-the-model-t-ford-of-satellites-meir-moalem-sky-and-space-global"The 200 nano-satellites in the Pearl constellation will be launched between mid-2019 and late 2020 in a staggered deployment that reduces risk, allows learnings between launches, and more efficient use of capital and management of cash flow."..."Working in collaboration with Virgin Orbital, SAS Global’s first launch projected for later this year will deliver the first payload of 16 nano-satellites currently being manufactured by GomSpace in Europe, with two satellites currently being produced a week, with the aim for a satellite a day in the coming months."
To accommodate the needs of SAS, GomSpace is establishing a separate production line so that a new batch of 25 satellites will be ready for launch every two to three months.
A Falcon 9 is scheduled to launch the next Dragon resupply mission to the ISS from pad 40, CRS-17, on April 12 at the earliest, at around 11am EDT. The launch window is instantaneous. The launch time gets 22-26 minutes earlier each day. The first stage will land back at Cape Canaveral about eight minutes after launch.
https://blogs.nasa.gov/commercialcrew/2019/02/06/nasa-partners-update-commercial-crew-launch-dates/QuoteTest Flight Planning Dates:SpaceX Demo-1 (uncrewed): March 2, 2019Boeing Orbital Flight Test (uncrewed): NET April 2019Boeing Pad Abort Test: NET May 2019SpaceX In-Flight Abort Test: June 2019SpaceX Demo-2 (crewed): July 2019Boeing Crew Flight Test (crewed): NET August 2019
Test Flight Planning Dates:SpaceX Demo-1 (uncrewed): March 2, 2019Boeing Orbital Flight Test (uncrewed): NET April 2019Boeing Pad Abort Test: NET May 2019SpaceX In-Flight Abort Test: June 2019SpaceX Demo-2 (crewed): July 2019Boeing Crew Flight Test (crewed): NET August 2019
The SpaceX Falcon 9 launch of Nusantara Satu (PSN VI)/GTO-1/SpaceIL from SLC-40 is expected to move to a NET of Feb 21 at 20:45 Eastern.
March 2, for DM-1.https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=45110.0;attach=1543270;image
Now NET November 2020: http://dipbt.bundestag.de/dip21/btd/19/072/1907253.pdf"Die Satelliten werden voraussichtlich im Zeitraum November 2020 bis September2021 in die Umlaufbahn gebracht" -- The satellites will presumably brought to orbit in the timespan of November 2020 to September 2021.
Translation is correct. Launch(es) of SARah satellites will presumably happen between Nov. 2020 and Sep. 2021 according to Bundestag.
The next United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral, flying with two solid rocketboosters, will be the maiden flight of Boeing's Starliner space capsule on an uncrewed demonstrationmission to the International Space Station, on late April at the earliest, in the early morning or middleof the night EDT.
Spaceflight, the Seattle-based company that is one of the leading aggregators of smallsats that are typically launched as secondary payloads on large vehicles, announced a launch services agreement (LSA) Feb. 6 with small launch vehicle developer Vector. Spaceflight will buy a launch of a Vector-R rocket scheduled for later this year, with “multiple priced options” for future launches....Virgin Orbit’s Hart said he expects to begin commercial LauncherOne operations in the middle of this year, with launches following initially every two to three months before ramping up its launch rate.Vector announced a year ago it expected to perform its first orbital Vector-R launch before the end of 2018, but that schedule has slipped “because of the facts that we find on the ground plus the government shutdown,” Cantrell said. A suborbital launch of the Block 1 version of Vector-R is scheduled for May, followed by an orbital launch in August. Four orbital launches are planned for 2019, he said, and those launches have been sold.
The Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and Ices Explorer (SPHEREx) mission is a planned two-year mission funded at $242 million (not including launch costs) and targeted to launch in 2023.
Patouraux said Kacific-1, a high-throughput Ka-band “condosat” that shares the same chassis as Japanese operator Sky Perfect JSAT’s JCSAT-18, is slated for launch in the third quarter of 2019. Boeing is building the satellite.