SpaceX is set to launch its first 'Twilight' rideshare mission, marking a significant milestone in space exploration. The mission, departing from Vandenberg Space Force Base, will fly to a 'dawn-dusk Sun-synchronous orbit'.
The Falcon 9 rocket, carrying a diverse range of payloads, is scheduled for liftoff at 5:20 a.m. PST. This will be the fifth flight for booster 1097, which has previously launched Starlink V2 Mini Optimized satellites and the Sentinel-6B spacecraft.
The mission will feature a trio of NASA spacecraft, including the Pandora telescope, designed to study exoplanets and their atmospheres. This mission, led by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, will observe exoplanets in both visible and infrared light, providing valuable data for future space exploration.
Additionally, the mission will carry the BlackCat and SPARCS CubeSats, funded by NASA's Astrophysics Research and Analysis Program. BlackCat, a wide-field x-ray telescope, aims to study powerful cosmic explosions, while SPARCS will focus on solar flares and sunspots of low-mass stars.
Exolaunch, a launch integrator, will manage over half of the 40 deployments, including the Connecta Internet of Things CubeSats and the Araqys-D1/Dcubed-1 satellite, which aims to manufacture a 60-cm boom in space. Kepler Communications will also deploy its Aether satellites, designed for high-throughput, low-latency laser links.
The 'Twilight' mission promises to be a groundbreaking event, pushing the boundaries of space exploration and technology, and offering a glimpse into the future of space communication and research.