Firefly Aerospace launches Lockheed Martin satellite on the 'Fly the Lightning' mission
Payload
Firefly’s Alpha rocket will launch Lockheed Martin’s new wideband Electronically Steerable Antenna (ESA) technology integrated on a Terran Orbital Nebula satellite bus.
Developed within Lockheed Martin Space’s Ignite organization using a proprietary design, the ESA payload will demonstrate faster on-orbit sensor calibration to deliver rapid capabilities to U.S. warfighters.
The ESA sensor is expected to calibrate in a fraction of the time it takes to operationalize traditional on-orbit sensors, which historically can take months to be powered on, fully calibrated and ready to perform their mission.
Alpha FLTA004 Fly the Lightning will launch a dedicated payload for Lockheed Martin in low Earth orbit to help get on-orbit capabilities in the hands of U.S. warfighters faster. As a secondary objective, the mission team will further demonstrate responsive space capabilities by tracking and improving the total working hours required from payload receival to launch readiness compared to Alpha FLTA003, the record-breaking VICTUS NOX mission.
During the final launch operations, the team will transport the payload faring to the launch pad and mate it to Firefly’s Alpha rocket using similar responsive operations to VICTUS NOX. The launch is being observed by members of the U.S. Space Force Tactically Responsive Space team to inform future missions and the requirements for repeatable on-demand launch capabilities.
'Fly the Lightning' is taking a satellite to orbit for Lockheed Martin.
Firefly Aerospace launched its Alpha rocket for the fourth time ever today (Dec. 22), sending a Lockheed Martin satellite toward orbit.
Alpha lifted off from California's Vandenberg Space Force Base Friday today at12:32 p.m. EST (1732 GMT; 9:32 a.m. local California time), kicking off a mission that Firefly calls "Fly the Lightning."
The launch was originally scheduled for Wednesday (Dec. 20), but bad weather pushed it back by two days.
(The upper stage of Firefly Aerospace's Alpha rocket snapped this view high above Earth)"Fly the Lightning" is sending an electronically steerable antenna (ESA) payload developed by aerospace giant Lockheed Martin tolow Earth orbit.
The instrument "will demonstrate faster on-orbit sensor calibration to deliver rapid capabilities to U.S. warfighters," Firefly representatives wrote in a mission description. "The ESA sensor is expected to calibrate in a fraction of the time it takes to operationalize traditional on-orbit sensors, which historically can take months to be powered on, fully calibrated and ready to perform their mission," they added.
The sensor will be deployed about 54.5 minutes after launch, if all goes according to plan. And everything does look good, with Alpha hitting all of its early marks.
(Firefly and its streaming partner, NASASpaceflight.com, ended the launch webcast about 10 minutes after liftoff, at the request of Lockheed Martin.)
Flight 3, a mission for the U.S. Space Force called Victus Nox, was a triumph. Alpha lifted off just 27 hours after the Space Force gave the order, a shorter turnaround than on any previous national-security mission. The rocket also deployed its primary payload — a satellite that will perform a "space domain awareness" mission — at the proper altitude. Though Fly the Lightning's customer is a private company, the U.S. military watched the liftoff with keen interest.
"The launch is being observed by members of the U.S. Space Force Tactically Responsive Space team to inform future missions and the requirements for repeatable on-demand launch capabilities," Firefly wrote in the mission description.
Editor's note: This story was updated at 1 p.m. EST on Dec. 21 with the new Dec. 22 target launch date, and again on Dec. 22 with a slightly delayed launch time. It was updated again at 12:50 p.m. EST on Dec. 22 with news of successful liftoff.
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