CAPE CANAVERAL SPACE FORCE STATION — For the second day in a row, SpaceX successfully launched a Starlink mission Thursday night.
Ignition of the nine first stage Merlin engines and liftoff of Falcon 9! pic.twitter.com/s8BKYKOsOm
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) April 18, 2024
The Falcon 9 rocket sent up the Starlink 6-52 mission from Space Launch Complex 40, Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, stated SpaceX.
The launch window opened at 6:40 p.m. ET, and the launch was on time.
The 45th Weather Squadron gave a 90% chance of good liftoff conditions, with the only concerns being the thick cloud layers rule.
Going to low-Earth orbit
Before this launch, SpaceX’s first-stage booster B1080 has only a half-dozen missions to its name:
- ESA’s Euclid telescope
- Ax-2 crew mission
- Starlink 6-11 mission
- Starlink 6-24 mission
- Ax-3 crew mission
- CRS-30 mission
After the first-stage separation, the booster landed in the Atlantic Ocean on the droneship A Shortfall of Gravitas.
About the mission
The 23 satellites from the Starlink company, owned by SpaceX, will be heading to low-Earth orbit to join the thousands already there.
Dr. Jonathan McDowell, of Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, has been recording Starlink satellites.
Before this launch, McDowell recorded the following:
- 5,829 are in orbit
- 5,206 are in operational orbit