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Confirmed: 57 more Starlink satellites deployed

Rideshare: Two Earth-observation satellites were also launched alongside the 57



SpaceX has launched 57 more satellites on Friday as part of the build-up of the Starlink constellation, which will form a globe spanning network of low Earth-orbit satellites.
Image Credit: Screengrab

SpaceX has launched 57 more satellites to beef up the Starlink constellation on Friday.

The satellites, which will form part of a constellation of thousands of a globespanning network of low-earth orbit satellites designed to act as orbiting cell sites. , along with two BlackSky Global Earth-observation satellites

Starlink is a satellite constellation being put together by SpaceX to provide satellite Internet access. The constellation will consist of thousands of mass-produced small satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO), working in combination with ground transceivers.

Before the August 7 launch, the last blastoff was on June 13, 2020, but SpaceX plans to pump up the pace of launches.

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Along with the 57, two BlackSky satellites were also deployed. They deployments in space were confirmed shortly after the launch on Friday. 

An illustration of Starlink, a fleet or constellation of internet-providing satellites designed by SpaceX. This image shows the shortest path in the network between London and Johannesburg.
Image Credit: Mark Handley/University College London

Earth-imaging satellites

In addition to the Starlink internet satellites, two small Earth-imaging satellites were also launched into orbit on Friday (August 7, 2020). It was the second of what's expected to be a series of Starlink "rideshare" missions.

The sattelites were launched on a two-stage Falcon 9 rocket, which lifted off at 1:12 a.m. EDT (0512 GMT) from Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

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It was the fifth launch for the Falcon 9's first-stage reusable rocket. And the booster pulled off yet another landing this, settling softly onto the deck of SpaceX's drone ship, known as "Of Course I Still Love You", located in the Atlantic Ocean about eight minutes after liftoff.

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Image Credit: File

The launch was the company's 12th overall mission for 2020. SpaceX has been relying on its fleet of used, flight-proven boosters to sustain a rapid pace of launches.

The company has had a successful summer, with the launch and landing of two NASA astronauts on the Demo-2 mission to the International Space Station — a first for a private company — and isn’t slowing down anytime soon.

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