WASHINGTON — The U.S. Space Force announced that Firefly Aerospace successfully launched a Millennium Space small satellite Sept. 14 — a mission designed to reveal capabilities to launch in a much shorter timeline than is typical for national security missions.
The Space Force mission, referred to as Victus Nox, flew on a Firefly Alpha rocket. It lifted off at 7:28 p.m. Pacific from Space Launch Complex 2 West at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California, the Space Systems Command said in a news release.
At government request, Firefly didn’t livestream the launch.
“In a significant advancement of Tactically Responsive Space capabilities, Space Systems Command and Firefly Aerospace successfully encapsulated a Millennium Space Systems-built space vehicle, mated it to Firefly’s Alpha launch vehicle, and accomplished all final launch preparations in 24 hours,” the command said.
Firefly and Millennium last yr were chosen for the Victus Nox mission. The businesses on Aug. 30 announced they were on “hot standby,” awaiting an alert notification from the Space Force. After getting the alert, the businesses had a 60-hour window to move the payload to Firefly’s launch site at Vandenberg, conduct fueling operations, and integrate it with the Alpha rocket’s payload adapter.
“Upon activation, the space vehicle was transported 165 miles from Millennium’s El Segundo facility to Vandenberg Space Force Base where it was tested, fueled, and mated to the launch adapter in just below 58 hours, significantly faster than the everyday timeline of weeks or months,” said Space Systems Command.
Ready for the primary launch window
After the Space Force gave Firefly the ultimate call to launch and orbit parameters, the corporate had 24 hours to update the trajectory, encapsulate the payload, transport it to the pad and stand able to launch at the primary available window.
“Liftoff took place at the primary available launch window, 27 hours after receipt of launch orders, setting a brand new record for responsive space launch,” said Lt. Gen. Michael Guetlein, commander of Space Systems Command.
“This exercise is an element of an end-to-end tactically responsive space demonstration which proves the US Space Force can rapidly integrate capabilities and can reply to aggression when called to achieve this on tactically relevant timelines,” Guetlein said.
Victus Nox was Firefly’s third launch. As a part of this mission, the corporate said it tested an Alpha stage two relight and targeted re-entry.
The responsive space program is run by the Space Systems Command’s Space Safari Program Office and the Rocket Systems Launch Program.
“Now on orbit, the following objective is to initialize the space vehicle and start operations in under 48 hours,” said Lt. Col. MacKenzie Birchenough, Space Safari materiel leader.
The previous responsive space mission was launched on a Northrop Grumman Pegasus in June 2021.