Starlink v1.0 4-1/60

USA

Int. spacecraft nº:

US spacecraft nº:


Launch data:

Designation 45178/45237 - 20012A/BM
Launch date 17 Feb 2020 - 15:05 UTC
Launch site CC, SLC40
Launch vehicle  Falcon-9 v1.2
Mission Communication
Earth orbit:
Perigee / Apogee 552 x 556 km
Inclination 53.1°
Period 95.6 min

60 satellites launched together (see table).

 Satellite  Cospar nº  Int. Design.  Orbit  Decay
 Starlink v1.0 4-1 (1138)  2020-012A  45178  552.8 x 555.9 x 53.1  
 Starlink v1.0 4-2 (1143)  2020-012B  45179    
 Starlink v1.0 4-3 (1192)  2020-012C  45180    
 Starlink v1.0 4-4 (1200)  2020-012D  45181    
 Starlink v1.0 4-5 (1201)  2020-012E  45182    
 Starlink v1.0 4-6 (1202)  2020-012F  45183    
 Starlink v1.0 4-7 (1205)  2020-012G  45184    
 Starlink v1.0 4-8 (1216)  2020-012H  45185    
 Starlink v1.0 4-9 (1224)  2020-012J  45186    
 Starlink v1.0 4-10 (1225)  2020-012K  45187    
 Starlink v1.0 4-11 (1228)  2020-012L  45188    
 Starlink v1.0 4-12 (1230)  2020-012M  45189    
 Starlink v1.0 4-13 (1234)  2020-012N  45190    
 Starlink v1.0 4-14 (1236)  2020-012P  45191    
 Starlink v1.0 4-15 (1237)  2020-012Q  45192    
 Starlink v1.0 4-16 (1239)  2020-012R  45193    
 Starlink v1.0 4-17 (1240)  2020-012S  45194    
 Starlink v1.0 4-18 (1241)  2020-012T  45195    
 Starlink v1.0 4-19 (1244)  2020-012U  45196    
 Starlink v1.0 4-20 (1269)  2020-012V  45197    
 Starlink v1.0 4-21 (1154)  2020-012W  45198    
 Starlink v1.0 4-22 (1197)  2020-012X  45199    
 Starlink v1.0 4-23 (1198)  2020-012Y  45200    
 Starlink v1.0 4-24 (1199)  2020-012Z  45201    
 Starlink v1.0 4-25 (1203)  2020-012AA  45202    
 Starlink v1.0 4-26 (1204)  2020-012AB  45203    
 Starlink v1.0 4-27 (1206)  2020-012AC  45204    
 Starlink v1.0 4-28 (1208)  2020-012AD  45205    
 Starlink v1.0 4-29 (1209)  2020-012AE  45206    
 Starlink v1.0 4-30 (1210)  2020-012AF  45207    
 Starlink v1.0 4-31 (1211)  2020-012AG  45208  324 x 361  09 Mar 2020
 Starlink v1.0 4-32 (1218)  2020-012AH  45209    
 Starlink v1.0 4-33 (1219)  2020-012AJ  45210    
 Starlink v1.0 4-34 (1220)  2020-012AK  45211    29 Feb 2020
 Starlink v1.0 4-35 (1231)  2020-012AL  45212    
 Starlink v1.0 4-36 (1232)  2020-012AM  45213    
 Starlink v1.0 4-37 (1233)  2020-012AN  45214    
 Starlink v1.0 4-38 (1245)  2020-012AP  45215    
 Starlink v1.0 4-39(1254)  2020-012AQ  45216    
 Starlink v1.0 4-40 (1271)  2020-012AR  45217    
 Starlink v1.0 4-41(1105)  2020-012AS  45218    
 Starlink v1.0 4-42 (1187)  2020-012AT  45219    
 Starlink v1.0 4-43 (1188)  2020-012AU  45220    
 Starlink v1.0 4-44 (1189)  2020-012AV  45221    
 Starlink v1.0 4-45 (1191)  2020-012AW  45222    
 Starlink v1.0 4-46 (1212)  2020-012AX  45223    
 Starlink v1.0 4-47 (1214)  2020-012AY  45224    
 Starlink v1.0 4-48 (1215)  2020-012AZ  45225    
 Starlink v1.0 4-49(1217)  2020-012BA  45226    
 Starlink v1.0 4-50 (1221)  2020-012BB  45227    
 Starlink v1.0 4-51 (1222)  2020-012BC  45228    
 Starlink v1.0 4-52 (1226)  2020-012BD  45229    
 Starlink v1.0 4-53 (1227)  2020-012BE  45230    
 Starlink v1.0 4-54 (1229)  2020-012BF  45231    
 Starlink v1.0 4-55 (1235)  2020-012BG  45232    
 Starlink v1.0 4-56 (1238)  2020-012BH  45233    
 Starlink v1.0 4-57 (1243)  2020-012BJ  45234    
 Starlink v1.0 4-58 (1246)  2020-012BK  45235    
 Starlink v1.0 4-59 (1247)  2020-012BL  45236    
 Starlink v1.0 4-60 (1270)  2020-012BM  45237    

Spacecraft data:

Prime manufacturer SpaceX
Platform 
Operator SpaceX
Mass at launch  227 kg
Dry Mass  kg
Basic shape  
Dimension (m) 
Equipment Ku/Ka-band payload, optical inter-satellite link
Solar array Solar arrays
Stabilization  
Propulsion 
DC power  
Design lifetime  


Description:

  • Starlink is SpaceX′s 4425-satellite low earth orbit constellation to provide broadband Internet access.
  • The mass-produced spacecraft carry a communications payload using the Ku and Ka frequency bands. The satellites will employ optical inter-satellite links and phased array beam forming and digital processing technologies.
  • The Starlink satellites feature a flat panel design with a single solar panel and have a mass of about 227 kg. The satellites are stacked for launch without the need for an dispenser. As a propulsion system for orbit adjustion and maintenance as well as deorbiting, they use krypton-fueled Hall thrusters. The Startracker navigation system is based on the heritage of Dragon. The satellites are designed autonomously avoid collisions based on uplinked tracking data. At the end of life, the Starlink satellites are to be actively deorbited, leading to reentry. 95% of the material is expected to burn up.
  • The first 1584 Starlink satellites are to operate from a 550 km orbit. Later sub-constellations are planned for 1200 km and very low 340 km orbital altitude, bringing the final constellation size to nearly 12000 satellites.
  • The initial 75 satellites, called Block v0.9, are prototypes without inter-satellite links and Ka-band antennas. These are to be used for extensive testing of deployment and operation and also of deliberate deorbiting.
  • For launch, 60 satellites are stacked on top of each other without the need of a massive deployer. 60 satellite is the maximum possible to fit inside the Falcon-9 v1.2 (Block 5), although a future enlarged fairing will allow launches of more than 60 satellites per mission.

Mission details:

  • SpaceX launched its first batch of 60 Starlink Ku-band internet satellites on May 24, 2019. The Falcon 9 rocket placed the satellites in a 434 x 442 km x 53.0 deg. Each one is about 200-250 kg (the press kit says 227 kg, but this is suspiciously close to the metric equivalent of 500 pounds, so it′s possible they really mean 500+-50 lb = 227 +- 23 kg). The satellites are a flat panel with krypton-propellant electric thrusters and a single deployable solar panel.
  • The second batch of 60 SpaceX Starlink satellites were launched on Nov 11, 2019.
    The Falcon 9 launch vehicle used first stage B1048 on its fourth flight; the stage landed on the OCISLY drone ship and the second stage was deorbited south of Australia, leaving the 60 payloads and four deployment rods in orbit. The new satellites have both Ka and Ku band antennae.
    This time the payloads were deployed in a 298 x 303 km x 53.0 deg orbit; the deployment rods seem to have been ejected in a retrograde direction and are in a 275 x 288 km orbit.
  • Starlink-1220, one of the satellites on the 5th Starlink launch(Starlink 4), was deorbited on Mar 9, 2020 from a 324 x 361 km orbit.
  • As of Mar 10, 2020 there were 20 sats from launch 3 and 39 sats from launch 4 undergoing orbital plane drift at the 350 km `pause' altitude, with 40 of the launch 5 satellites reaching or paused at that altitude. On Mar 11 to 13 all 99 of these sats abruptly began raising their orbits again, without waiting for their target orbital planes to be reached. I speculate that the plane-relocation process requires extra personnel and the abrupt orbit raising towards the operational 550 km orbit is a contingency activity in response to COVID19.

External links:


Ref.: #7(JR776,777), #228 - update: 12.03.21 Home