HomeHow To Watch SpaceX Launch Its Starlink Satellites?

How To Watch SpaceX Launch Its Starlink Satellites?

Elon Musk desires for everyone in the world to possess ultra high-speed Internet, which is a very noble cause, but it is a logistical difficulty at the same time. Difficulties, though, have not stopped the billionaire before and it is not about to start now.

When Elon Musk wants something, he’ll part with cash on the machines to achieve it.

So what is the first thing he is doing to fill the sky with satellites transmitting broadband Internet worldwide? He is testing those satellites — like SpaceX successfully pulled off in 2024 — and then building everything from the scratch.

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Days back, SpaceX launched the first 60 of 7,000 planned satellites that houses a network called Starlink into orbit.

The sat will get strapped to SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket, which got launched from Cape Canaveral from about 10:30 p.m. Wednesday and 12 a.m. Thursday.

A backup launch window will open today at 10:30 p.m.

The livestream can be viewed here 15 minutes before the launch window is opened.

Several communication satellites orbit the Earth from distances that are quite extreme, but Starlink’s lesser satellites will remain in low-Earth orbit so they can aid quicker internet speeds with lesser latency. SpaceX revealed that satellites will get deployed at an altitude of 440km 60 minutes after Falcon 9 launches and then make use of onboard propulsion to attain an operational altitude of 550km.

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The satellites have a Startracker navigation system for SpaceX to be precise with how they are pointed, plus they can monitor on-orbit debris and stay away from collisions.

After doing what they were created for in space, they will burn off in the Earth’s atmosphere. Today, almost all components of the sats will experience disintegration, but SpaceX reveals that designs in years will get the entire job done.

Their words were, “This mission will push the operational capabilities of the satellites to the limit,”

“SpaceX expects to encounter issues along the way, but our learnings here are key to developing and affordable and reliable broadband service in the future.”

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Samuel Afolabi is a lazy tech-savvy that loves writing almost all tech-related kinds of stuff. He is the Editor-in-Chief of TechVaz. You can connect with him socially :)

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