On New Year's eve, the company is going to launch 114 satellites into space in order to start the new year off right.
The Transporter 6 mission will be launched at 9:56 a.m. by a Falcon 9 rocket. The space force station is located in Florida. You can watch the launch at Space.com in a live stream.
The first of seven agriculture-focused satellites for the company will be launched on the Transporter 6 mission. The last of the 114 satellites will be deployed during the Transporter 6 mission.
New possibilities of satellite technologies to the agricultural industry have been brought about by this launch. "We will now work with proprietary datasets to provide even deeper and more accurate insights for our customers and partners."
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Every day, the SAT-1 uses 11 bands of light to scrutinize 386,000 miles. It is expected that examining the crop's health in this way will allow farmers to better care for their crops and reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
The full SAT fleet will aim to look at over 12 million square miles, which is more than the United States. The seven satellites are designed to reach 100 percent of the world with the largest areas of farmland and forest.
There are other satellites that will fly to space. Six satellites will be launched by Spire Global to expand its constellation monitoring maritime and aviation traffic.
Spaceflight Inc. plans to keep consistent lighting conditions below the fleet by hefting four Kleos spacecraft. Kleos searches for hidden and illegal activity by examining radio frequencies from space.
The Transporter series of missions feature small satellites flying to space on a single rocket. The full manifest of Transporter 6 has not been confirmed by the company. Transporter-1 was the first mission in the series.
The first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket has flown 15 times. Three commercial satellite flights and 10 Starlink satellite missions were launched by the booster. If everything goes according to plan, the booster will return to a landing pad at the Space Force Station.
The co-author of Why Am I Taller is Elizabeth Howell. A book about space medicine is in the works. Follow us on social media, like us on Facebook (opens in new tab)