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You are here: Home / News / UPDATE: Rocket Lab To Uplift Synspective’s StriX-a Smallsat To Orbit On December 15th

UPDATE: Rocket Lab To Uplift Synspective’s StriX-a Smallsat To Orbit On December 15th

December 14, 2020 by editorial

The 17th Electron launch by Rocket Lab for ‘The Owl’s Night Begins‘ is now scheduled for between 09:00 and 10:59 hours, UTC, on December 15.

A live webcast of this launch will be available about 15 to 20 minutes prior to launch at https:www.rocketlabusa.com/live-stream.

In case such is needed, backup windows for this launch are available through December 24th… let’s hope such is simply not a necessity and that the launch will be successful.

The launch window for ‘The Owl’s Night Begins’ is…

UTC: December 15 (09:00 – 10:59) 
NZT: December 15 (22:00 – 23:59) 
PT: December 15 (01:00 – 02:59) 
ET: December 15 (04:00 – 05:59) 
JST: December 15 (18:00 – 19:59) 

Original launch information…

Rocket Lab has announced Japanese Earth-imaging company Synspective as the customer for Rocket Lab’s 17th Electron launch and the company’s seventh mission of the year.

The Rocket Lab Electron rocket liftoff with their most recent mission, “Return to Sender.”

The dedicated mission for Synspective is scheduled for lift-off during a 14-day launch window opening on December 12 UTC and will launch from Rocket Lab Launch Complex 1 on New Zealand’s Māhia Peninsula to a targeted 500 km circular LEO.

The mission is named ‘The Owl’s Night Begins’ in a nod to Synspective’s StriX family of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) spacecraft developed to be able to image millimeter-level changes to the Earth’s surface from space, independent of weather conditions on Earth and at any time of the day or night. Strix is also the genus of owls.

Artistic rendition of the StriX-a smallsat, courtesy of Synspective.

The StriX-α satellite onboard this mission will be the first of a series of spacecraft deployments for Synspective’s planned constellation of more than 30 SAR smallsats to collate data of metropolitan centers across Asia on a daily basis that can be used for urban development planning, construction and infrastructure monitoring, and disaster response.

For this mission, Rocket Lab will use a custom, expanded fairing to encompass Synspective’s wide-body satellite C, the first use of the expanded fairing options that Rocket Lab recently introduced alongside a suite of vehicle performance improvements, including advances in battery technology which enable an improved payload lift capacity up to 300 kg (660 lbs). Rocket Lab will also perform an advanced mid-mission maneuver with its Kick Stage space tug that will shield the StriX-α satellite from the sun to reduce radiation exposure ahead of payload deployment.

Executive Comments

Peter Beck

Rocket Lab founder and CEO, Peter Beck, said, “We’re honored to be providing the ride to orbit for Synspective and playing a pivotal role in deploying the first satellite of their constellation. By flying as a dedicated mission on Electron, the Synspective team have complete control over their orbit and launch schedule, giving them a degree of certainty over a crucial time in their business development.”

Dr. Motoyuki Arai

Synspective Founder and CEO, Dr. Motoyuki Arai, added, “We are so happy to share this launch of our first satellite, the StriX-α, together with Rocket Lab. This is just the start of a 30 SAR satellites constellation. We are very excited to begin the scaling of our business, which includes both SAR satellites and downstream solutions.”

Filed Under: News

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