Spacex sent a high space pull along with other Starlink internet satellite batch on Sunday night (September 4) – and landed a rocket on a ship in the sea as well. The Spacex Falcon 9 rocket was appointed on Sunday from the Cape Cape Cape Cape Outer Cape Station on the east coast of Florida, carrying 51 Starlink internet satellites to orbit.

Also on a ship with Starlink Group 4-20 is the Sherpa-LTC2, the pull provided by the SpaceFlight company based in Seattle. This tug carries a charge for the Varuna Boeing (Varuna-TDM) technology demonstration mission, which “aims to test V-Band communication for the proposed constellation of 147 non-geostationary broadband satellites,” according to Spacenews (opened in the new tab). The first Sherpa-LTC orbital transfer vehicle was deleted from the opportunity to launch SpaceX January 2022 due to a leak of propellan, Spacenews added.

Sunday flight plans called on SpaceX to bring the first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket back to Earth for soft touchdown in Droneship just read instructions, which was placed in the Atlantic Ocean. Landing – The seventh for this special booster – occurs according to plan, about 8.5 minutes after launch.

Sherpa-LTC2 was deployed from the top stage of Falcon 9 about 49 minutes after taking off, and Starlink followed it 23 minutes after that, Spacex was confirmed via Twitter (opening in the new tab). SpaceX has sent more than 3,000 Starlink satellites to orbit, in an effort to create a large constellation for broadband services targeted for remote areas. SpaceX has launched more than 25 Starlink-centric missions in 2022.

Sunday launch is the 40th place of SpaceX and continues to add to Megacontellation Starlink. SpaceX has the approval to launch 12,000 Starlink satellites and has asked international regulators to give a thumb to an additional 30,000. At the end of August, Spacex founder and CEO Elon Musk announced plans to highlight connectivity directly to smartphones using Starlink, along with T-Mobile. Another agreement announced on Tuesday (August 30) will see the Starlink service with the Royal Caribbean Cruise Ships.

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