Owl Night Long

Well folks, it’s time for another Rocket Lab launch, and the first launch thread in this new community!

Scheduled for UTC 2024-03-12 15:03
Scheduled for (local) 2024-03-13 04:03 (NZDT)
Launch site LC-1B, Māhia Peninsula, New Zealand.
Booster recovery No
Launch vehicle Electron + Curie
Customer Synspective
Payload StriX-3 (100 kg)
Mission success criteria Successful deployment of spacecraft into Sun-Synchronous Orbit

Livestreams

Stream Link
Rocket Lab (official) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GF9cWWkSlsQ
Everyday Astronaut
Space Affairs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gclLUKCSbdM
The Launch Pad https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRz-JX97NP4

Stats

  • This will be the 3rd launch for Rocket Lab this year.
  • This will be the 45th overall launch for Rocket Lab.

Payload info:

Rocket Lab mission page

NextSpaceflight:

This is the third of a bulk buy of three Electron launches by Synspective to deliver their StriX satellites to low Earth orbit. StriX satellites can collect data with a ground resolution of 1-3m and a swath width of more than 10-30km. Each Electron launch will deliver 1 StriX satellite into orbit.

Previous mission (On Closer Inspection) | Next mission (Live and Let Fly (NROL-123))

Please post small launch updates, discussions, and questions here! Also feel free to leave feedback or suggestions for the mod team. We’re a brand new community, so feedback is very valuable!

  • Dave@lemmy.nzM
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    8 months ago

    The sidereal day you linked to says it’s about being synced with the celestial sphere (position of the stars). Not the sun?

    I would have thought if you want to be in the sun, you’d need to launch to get to the same position at the same time relative to sunrise. I don’t really understand how the 4 minute drift happens for solar synchronous orbits?

    • threelonmusketeersOPM
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      8 months ago

      Upon reflection, I believe you are correct and I was mistaken. For SSO, launch time would be relative to solar time (sunrise) NOT sidereal time (stars). Whoops :)