User Panel
Mission: Falcon 9, BlueBird Block 1
1) Mission Description: "A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch the first five satellites for AST SpaceMobile’s in-orbit cellular service. Each BlueBird satellite has a communications array measuring 693 square feet. The Falcon 9 booster will return to a landing at Cape Canaveral’s LZ-1." SpaceFlightNow source 2) Launch window: 4:52 - around 8:52 AM EDT (12 September 2024). 3) Launch site: SLC-40, Florida 4) Launch direction: Northeast 5) Webcast viewing option: SpaceX - Falcon 9 - BlueBird Block 1 #1-5 - LC-40 - Cape Canaveral SFS - September 12, 2024 6) Observation comments: None. 7) Launch preparations: a. Boats heading out: Go Cosmos departed PC on Sep 7 @ 6:12pm ET Source: NASASpaceFlight.com b. Satellites: c. Ready for launch: Not found d. Navigation Warnings: Source: NASASpaceFlight.com 8) First stage return/ocean recovery/disposal: Return to Landing Zone 1. 9) Launch to deployment events/timeline: Hours:Minutes:Seconds after lift-off. Times approximate. 00:01:10 Max Q (moment of peak mechanical stress on the rocket) 00:02:18 1st stage main engine cutoff (MECO) 00:02:22 1st and 2nd stages separate 00:02:26 Stage 1 flip 00:02:29 2nd stage engine starts (SES-1) 00:02:34 1st stage boostback burn starts 00:03:11 Fairing separation 00:03:29 1st stage boostback burn ends 00:06:04 1st stage entry burn begins 00:06:17 1st stage entry burn ends 00:07:08 1st stage landing burn begins 00:07:32 1st stage landing 00:08:23 2nd stage engine cutoff (SECO-1) 00:53:57 BlueBird 1 deploys 00:55:32 BlueBird 2 deploys 00:58:37 BlueBird 3 deploys 01:02:22 BlueBird 4 deploys 01:07:53 BlueBird 5 deploys 10) Orbit insertion: |
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That is an interesting looking setup. Looks heavy as fuck but I guess not since it's a land landing.
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It’s… probably not as bad as you think it is.
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Polaris Dawn Flight Day 2 Update The Polaris Dawn crew began Flight Day 2 with an incredible milestone – Dragon reached an apogee of more than 1,400 kilometers, marking the farthest humans have traveled in space since the completion of the Apollo program over 50 years ago. Mission Specialist Sarah Gillis and Mission Specialist and Medical Officer Anna Menon also became the first two women to have travelled this far in space! Mission Commander Jared Isaacman also passed the torch to the NASA Artemis crew, saying he’s looking forward to their upcoming flight. After completing six orbits of Earth at this altitude, Dragon performed a series of descent burns to reach an orbit of ~190 x 700 km for Thursday’s spacewalk while simultaneously continuing to safely lower its interior’s pressure, bringing the cabin environment closer to conditions required for the EVA. The crew also spent a few hours demonstrating the suit’s pressurized mobility, verifying positions and accessibility in microgravity along with preparing the cabin for the EVA. In addition to EVA prep, the crew conducted a series of activities on-orbit, including time dedicated to science and research. The crew focused on monitoring initial changes to eye sight and ocular health, studying how fluid shifts and exposure to microgravity affect blood flow, and assessed how medications are processed by the body while on-orbit. The entire crew met with representatives from Folds of Honor — an organization providing educational scholarships to spouses and children of America's fallen and disabled military service-members and first responders — honoring those who have made the ultimate sacrifice in service of the United States. Anna then read her book, Kisses from Space, to a group of St. Jude patients and her family, followed by a Q&A session. Olympic gold medalist Shawn Johnson East joined the crew via video transmission to host the book reading. Jared, Kidd, Sarah, and Anna ended their day with individual family calls conducted over Starlink connections and preparing a special message for fans later in the mission before settling in for a good night’s sleep ahead of tomorrow’s world-first commercial spacewalk. |
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video
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only about 4.5 hours from the spacewalk
NSF coverage starts at 1:15am EDT First Commercial Spacewalk - Polaris Dawn Performs EVA with SpaceX Dragon |
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Originally Posted By RiverSwine45: That feels like it was such a long time ago. Are you sure that was a NASA made them do it thing? Or was it a part of SpaceX planned development process they had submitted? View Quote No, it's possible that I misremembered or the discussions at that time were mistaken. I can't imagine SpaceX would have voluntarily chosen to sacrifice one of their boosters if they thought they could have received certification without it. I'm not sure when the decision to conduct the in flight test was made, but the flight was about 18 months after Musk's appearance on Joe Rogan and NASA's subsequent investigation and scrutiny into him and the culture at SpaceX. https://archive.ph/hvCaC |
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5 a.m. wake up !
Double sonic boom startled the birds too. Didn't expect a launch, they really snuck that in this morning with the rain so close by. Pic credit to LabPadre and the Gator cam at Port Canaveral. Attached File |
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It's a strange, strange world we live in, Master Jack
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Visors are about to close on Polaris astronauts to begin the EVA.
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Did I just kill another thread?
We are in the middle of a Communist Revolution in the USA. There is no voting our way out of this. |
Hatch opening.
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Ready to open hatch.
Go to open the hatch. Unlatching. |
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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Unseated the hatch.
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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Hatch looking sticky.
Automated opening canceled, going for manual opening. |
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Go to manually open the hatch.
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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Of COURSE it's opened between ground station relays without video.
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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Helmet cam view is awesome.
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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where's the Helmet cam view?
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Charter Member, Knights of Wonder
Norcal LEO callsign: Hold Fast Team Randstad |
A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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Awesome show!
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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That's good to hear they are keeping a positive air flow into the cabin so hyper vapors won't be coming in causing a problem
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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Originally Posted By Klee: The live stream switched from the helmet cam to the exterior view. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Klee: Originally Posted By Harmonic_Distortion: where's the Helmet cam view? The live stream switched from the helmet cam to the exterior view. yes, I wanted helmet cam view when Jared was out |
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Charter Member, Knights of Wonder
Norcal LEO callsign: Hold Fast Team Randstad |
Suits seem to be decently flexible.
Did they just say the suits are getting warm and no way to cool them? |
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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And the EVA is over and they closed the hatch.
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A tough man can take a bullet, but a wise man can dodge one. Stay focused my brothers.
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That was cool. Congrats to the Polaris team on the first private spacewalk!
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Very neat.
Kudos to SpaceX for bringing back the heyday of NASA. |
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"that tunnel is longer than you think."
That's what she said. Come on man... Slipping. |
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BlueBird 1-5 deployment |
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Polaris Dawn Flight Day 3 Update Early Thursday morning at 7:58 a.m. ET, the Polaris Dawn crew successfully completed the world’s first spacewalk – also known as an extravehicular activity (EVA) – from Dragon at 732.2 km above Earth. Shortly after arriving in space on Tuesday, the crew began a two-day pre-breathe process, designed to prevent decompression sickness while also preparing the crew for the environment inside the EVA suits by gradually lowering Dragon’s cabin pressure and increasing the oxygen concentration. Then on Thursday, the crew donned their suits and initiated Dragon seat rotation, suit tare, and the heads-up display and helmet camera checkouts. The 106-minute spacewalk officially began at 6:12 a.m. ET when suit pressurization started, the nitrogen purge was initiated, and pure oxygen (O2) was flowing into the suits. A secondary flow of oxygen primarily helped provide cooling to the suits, which would come in handy during the spacewalk. Once suit leak checks were complete, the crew and ground teams gave the go for Dragon to initiate venting, which took the cabin’s pressure down from ~8 psi to below 1 psi – nearly to the vacuum of space. Simultaneously, Dragon repositioned its trunk to face the sun ahead of the hatch opening. Mission Commander Jared Isaacman opened the hatch and for the first time, four astronauts were simultaneously exposed to the vacuum of space. Jared and Mission Specialist Sarah Gillis separately exited the spacecraft and individually performed a series of suit mobility demonstrations to test the performance of the spacesuit in the vacuum environment of space. Mission Pilot Kidd Poteet and Mission Specialist Anna Menon remained seated, managing suit umbilicals and monitoring vital support systems and telemetry on Dragon’s displays. Upon completion of their individual EVAs, the hatch was closed, Dragon re-pressurized to 14 psi, cabin oxygen and pressure levels confirmed, officially completing the suit testing alongside the first commercial spacewalk and the first EVA from a Dragon spacecraft. Throughout the EVA, stunning visuals were afforded by Dragon’s cameras and the spacesuits helmet cameras as the crew orbited between 184.9 x 732.2 km above Earth. Following the spacewalk, the crew took time to rest and recuperate, enjoying a well-deserved meal before posting from space for the first time on X using Starlink high-speed internet. The crew concluded the day by connecting with their families and settling in for their sleep period ahead of Flight Day 4. |
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Hoping for another view from Nor Cal!
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Originally Posted By AmericanPeople: Mission: Falcon 9, Starlink 9-6 1) Mission description: "A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch another batch of 21 Starlink internet, including 13 with Direct to Cell capabilities, from Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E). The Falcon 9's first stage booster will land on the drone ship 'Of Course I Still Love You' in the Pacific Ocean." Source 2) Launch window: 6:45 - 9:49 PM PDT (12 September 2024). 3) Launch site: SLC-4E, Vandenberg Space Force Base, California 4) Launch direction: Southeasterly 5) Webcast viewing options: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1s13TgnWIk 6) Observation comments: Assuming that the first launch time is 6:45 PM PDT, the second stage in sunlit until at least second stage cutoff. All the remaining launch times will have the second stage not be sunlit. I use the sun at least 6 degrees below the horizon to start local visibility. In El Paso TX we have these possible visibility points: 7:48:15 PM MDT 282/0 (Azimuth/elevation) 7:51:05 PM MDT 257/6 3 degrees below Venus 7:52:00 PM MDT 243/7 For Albuquerque: 7:49:20 PM MDT 256/2.5 5.5 degrees below Venus 7:51:00 PM MDT 239/4 7) Launch preparations: a. Boats heading out. Lindsay C + OCISLY departed PoLB on Sep 10 @ 5:42am PT / 8:42am ET https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/assets/61383.0/2313769.jpg Source: NASASpaceFlight.com Go Beyond departed PoLB on Sep 10 @ 7:12am PT / 10:12am ET https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/assets/61383.0/2313771.jpg Source: NASASpaceFlight.com b. Satellites: Previously provided c. Ready for launch: Not found d. Navigation warning: https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/assets/61383.0/2313057.jpg Source: NASASpaceFlight.com 8) First stage return/ocean recovery/disposal: Recovery on drone ship OCISLY 9) Launch to deployment events/timeline: Hours:Minutes:Seconds after lift-off. Times approximate. 00:01:07 Max Q (Moment of peak mechanical stress on the rocket) 00:02:26 1st stage main engine cutoff (MECO) 00:02:30 1st and 2nd stages separate 00:02:36 2nd stage engine starts (SES-1) 00:03:02 Fairing deployment 00:06:06 1st stage entry burn begins 00:06:28 1st stage entry burn ends 00:07:50 1st stage landing burn begins 00:08:12 1st stage landing 00:08:40 2nd stage engine cutoff (SECO-1) 00:53:55 2nd stage engine starts (SES-2) 00:53:56 2nd stage engine cutoff (SECO-2) 01:00:48 Starlink satellites deploy 10) Orbit destination: 269 kilometers perigee x 279 kilometers apogee, 53.16 degree inclination View Quote It looks like this one might be going in a little under 8 minutes. I won't be able to see squat from San Diego. SpaceX - Falcon 9 - Starlink 9-6 - SLC-4E - Vandenberg Space Force Base - September 12, 2024 |
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Everywhere we go, we are surrounded by people who stumble through life dependent upon the vigilance and/or kindness of others. - Zardoz
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Originally Posted By AmericanPeople: Was the one last week at night? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By AmericanPeople: Originally Posted By JoseCuervo: And, no joy. I am not sure why. Basically the same due south trajectory as last week. Was the one last week at night? Yes. I still expected to see something. Might it have anything to do with the orbit inclination? It was 70 degrees last week, 53ish on Wednesday. |
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Originally Posted By JoseCuervo: Yes. I still expected to see something. Might it have anything to do with the orbit inclination? It was 70 degrees last week, 53ish on Wednesday. View Quote If you can provide a nearby city I can run the look angles for you. It will be much harder to see it in daylight especially if you only see the second stage burn. |
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