SpaceX is targeting the launch of the 2nd Tranche 0 mission for the Space Development Agency on August thirty first at 7:26 a.m. PT (14:26 UTC) from Space Launch Complex 4 East at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.
The Tranche 0, Flight 2 mission features 13 payloads that will likely be deployed right into a Polar Orbit and, because the mission name implies, is the 2nd flight of this small satellite constellation. The Tranche 1 swarm is scheduled for late 2024.
The Space Development Agency is part of the USA Department of Defense that focuses on space-based communications with U.S. warfighters across the globe. The Tranche 0 group will feature 28 total satellites, with 10 having been previously launched by a Falcon 9 in April 2023, and a couple of of those satellites were built by SpaceX, with the opposite 8 being built by York Space Systems.
SpaceX won a contract price $149 million back in October 2020 to construct 4 satellites to trace missile launches. The satellites are based on the corporate’s Starlink satellite bus, and that is the primary time SpaceX has won a contract to construct a satellite for the U.S. Government. L3Harris also won a contract price $193.5 million to construct 4 similar satellites.
Tomorrow morning’s launch will feature 10 Lockheed Martin-built satellites, and as of the time of this text, it’s unknown if it’ll host the opposite SpaceX-built satellites or the L3Harris satellites.
It’s almost time! ⏰
Tomorrow, 10 @lockheedmartin-buit small satellites will launch aboard a @SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in support of Space Development Agency’s Tranche 0 Transport Layer mission. pic.twitter.com/sJFNSeNY7D
— Lockheed Martin Space (@LMSpace) August 30, 2023
The Falcon 9 providing the ride to space for these payloads is Booster 1063. B1063 will likely be flying for the thirteenth time, having previously supported 8 Starlink missions, NASA’s DART mission, ESA’s Sentinel 6 Michael Freilich mission, Transporter 7 mission, and the Iridium-9/OneWeb Flight 19 mission.
Following the primary phase of flight, the Falcon 9 will perform a boostback burn and return for a landing at Landing Zone 4, just 1,400 feet from where it took off minutes before.
SpaceX will begin its webcast quarter-hour before the scheduled launch time.