Amazon’s 1st Kuiper megaconstellation satellites will launch on a ULA Atlas V rocket

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Mercredi 21 avril 2021 ((rezonodwes.com))–

Amazon has selected United Launch Alliance (ULA) to start launching its megaconstellation of internet satellites to space.

ULA will participate in nine launches of Project Kuiper, which Amazon hopes will eventually send 3,236 advanced satellites to low Earth orbit. The number of satellites ULA will send aloft was not disclosed in a press release from the two organizations, nor was the value of the launch contract.

The missions will proceed on ULA’s Atlas V rocket from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at some date, also yet to be announced. Atlas V is a veteran of numerous Earth and Mars missions to low Earth orbit and beyond, including Global Positioning System satellites, the New Horizons mission to Pluto, the recently landed Mars Perseverance rover, as well as the Curiosity rover and Insight missions that landed on Mars in 2012 and 2018.

« We could not be more pleased to be working with Amazon to support the initiative, » Tory Bruno, ULA’s president and CEO, said in a statement

Amazon hinted that it will be looking at other companies to launch satellites into space on its overall aim to provide broadband Internet for underserved communities in remote or rural areas. The satellites and dispensing system are designed « to accommodate multiple launch vehicles — this gives us the flexibility to use many different rockets and providers to launch our satellite system, » Rajeev Badyal, vice president of technology for Project Kuiper, said in the same statement. « Atlas V is a capable, reliable rocket, and we’re proud to be working with ULA to support these important first launches, » Badyal added.

Amazon has been quiet about revealing details about Project Kuiper, which it first announced in 2019. At the time of the announcement, the company did not disclose details such as which companies would be building the satellites, nor when it plans to have the constellation in orbit.

Its initial plans filed with the International Telecommunication Union included 784 satellites in a 366-mile (590 kilometers) orbit, plus 1,156 satellites in a 391-mile (630 km) orbit and 1,296 in a 380-mile (610 km) orbit, which firmly places the satellites in low Earth orbit. For comparison, the International Space Station’s average orbit is 250 miles (400 km).

source : space.com

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