logo
#

Latest news with #ToryBruno

Enjoy these awesome views of ULA's latest liftoff
Enjoy these awesome views of ULA's latest liftoff

Digital Trends

time25-06-2025

  • Science
  • Digital Trends

Enjoy these awesome views of ULA's latest liftoff

United Launch Alliance (ULA) and Amazon recently launched a second batch of Project Kuiper internet satellites to low-Earth orbit, and ULA boss Tory Bruno has just shared some awesome close-ups of the company's workhorse Atlas V rocket leaving the launchpad. The rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral in Florida on Monday, with cameras placed close to the launchpad capturing the moment the Atlas V blasted skyward: This one includes the gorgeous backdrop of a sunrise over the Atlantic Ocean: Best capture of the @ulalaunch Rocket, Atlas V 551 Rocket powers to deliver project kuiper satellites for Amazon.@torybruno always doing the most amazing job 👏. ULA launch has the best scientists in America. — Robinson M רו🚀🦿🦸 (@RobinsonMuiru) June 24, 2025 'Bird's eye view of Kuiper 02 looking down from one of the lightning towers,' Bruno wrote in another video post shared on Tuesday: Bird's eye view of Kuiper 02 looking down from one of the lightning towers. (Turn up the volume) #Kuiper — Tory Bruno (@torybruno) June 24, 2025 And, finally, here's some slow-motion footage of the Atlas V leaving the launchpad: The Atlas V, which at 58.3 meters tall is about 11 meters shorter than SpaceX's Falcon 9, first launched in 2002 and has conducted more than 85 orbital flights over the decades. Recommended Videos The rocket is noted for its impressive versatility, offering a wide range of configurations that allow mission planners to tailor the rocket's payload fairing size, number of solid rocket boosters (from zero to five), and upper-stage engine count to precisely match the requirements of each space mission. ULA's Atlas V rocket will fly six more times for Project Kuiper before the company retires the vehicle and switches to its next-generation and more powerful Vulcan Centaur rocket for more launches. ULA is set to deliver more than half of the Project Kuiper constellation's 3,200 satellites during the next few years as Amazon builds out its Starlink-like internet-from-space service. The broadband system will combine satellites, customer terminals, ground stations, and Amazon Web Services infrastructure for high-speed, low-latency connectivity, with a particular focus on unserved and underserved communities around the world. Amazon is aiming to launch a limited service before the end of this year as its satellite constellation begins to expand.

ULA manages 2nd launch of year hours after SpaceX's 50th
ULA manages 2nd launch of year hours after SpaceX's 50th

Miami Herald

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Miami Herald

ULA manages 2nd launch of year hours after SpaceX's 50th

United Launch Alliance took a week to reset, but was able to send up its second launch of the year, another mission for Amazon's effort to compete with SpaceX's Starlink internet constellation. The launch came just hours after SpaceX sent up its 50th rocket from the Space Coast this year. An Atlas V rocket on the Kuiper-2 mission with 27 internet satellites lifted off at 6:54 a.m. from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station's Space Launch Complex 41. 'Hot, straight, and normal,' said ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno moments after launch on X. The launch came one week since ULA scrubbed because of bad temperature readings on the rocket related to a gaseous nitrogen purge line. SpaceX earlier Monday morning launched its 50th mission from the Space Coast, and 76th overall this year including California flights. A Falcon 9 lifted off from Canaveral's nearby Space Launch Complex 40 at 1:58 a.m. with 27 Starlink satellites. The first-stage booster flew for the 25th time landing on the droneship A Shortfall of Gravitas. SpaceX has now launched more than 9,000 Starlink satellites since 2019. The Space Coast has now seen 53 orbital launches for the year, with SpaceX flying all but three. Blue Origin launched its New Glenn rocket for the first time in January while ULA has now managed two missions. The Atlas V was one of only 14 left in ULA's stable, seven of which are set aside for Amazon as the company looks to get more than 3,200 of its Project Kuiper satellites into orbit by 2028. ULA's first launch of the year in April was also for Amazon sending up the constellation's first 27 operational satellites. The company also purchased an additional 38 launches on ULA's new Vulcan rocket as well as missions on Blue Origin, Arianespace and even SpaceX. In total, Amazon has lined up more than 80 flights as it tries to play catchup to SpaceX, which has launched close to 9,000 of its Starlink satellites since 2019. While the satellites are manufactured in Washington, Amazon has built a $120 million satellite processing facility at a nearly 80-acre site at the Kennedy Space Center's former Shuttle Landing Facility where they will get the final preparations for launch such as fueling. For now, ULA is the only company proliferating the constellation, and Vulcan has the lion's share of contracted missions. ULA has only flown its Vulcan rocket twice so far, both in 2024, but is expecting to fly it a third time as early as July on a national security mission for the Space Force. ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno said that after that mission, Vulcan would fly its first Project Kuiper flight, one during which Vulcan would have six solid rocket boosters in its most powerful configuration. After that, Amazon missions will jump back and forth between Vulcan and remaining six contracted Atlas V rockets. Vulcan rockets have a larger capacity than Atlas V and would be able to carry 45 Project Kuiper satellites per launch. Amazon has a goal of getting more than half of the planned constellation into orbit before July 2026 as part of requirements put forth by its Federal Communications Commission license. To increase launch cadence, ULA has been building out a second vertical integration facility in Cape Canaveral so it can prepare two rockets for launch at the same time. Its goal is to ramp up to at least two launches per month on the Space Coast. It also has launch capability from California. ULA had only five launches total in 2024 including the final Delta IV Heavy launch from Space Launch Complex 37. SpaceX under the direction of the Space Force demolished the launch tower at SLC-37 last week in preparation to build out new launch facilities to support its in-development Starship and Super Heavy rockets. While SpaceX will continue launches from SLC-40 and Kennedy Space Center, ULA will focus its Space Coast operations entirely from SLC-41. ULA still has seven other Atlas V rockets set aside for other customers. One is for communications company ViaSat and six are assigned to Boeing Starliner launches, so the final flight for Atlas V may not come until as late as 2030. ULA has a backlog of more than 70 missions including 24 for national security. Its Vulcan rocket was only certified for those launches this spring after years of the delays in the rocket's development. Bruno has said ULA would like to ramp up to at least 24 launches per year by the end of 2026. The company formed as a partnership between Boeing and Lockheed Martin in 2006 and had been the primary launch provider for national security missions until SpaceX joined the competition. The most missions the company has flown in a single year has been 16 in 2009. -------------- Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Watch Live: ULA tries for 2nd launch of year on mission for Amazon
Watch Live: ULA tries for 2nd launch of year on mission for Amazon

Yahoo

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Watch Live: ULA tries for 2nd launch of year on mission for Amazon

United Launch Alliance took a week to reset, but will try again to send up its second launch of the year, another mission for Amazon's effort to compete with SpaceX's Starlink internet constellation. An Atlas V rocket on the Kuiper-2 mission with 27 internet satellites is targeting a 6:54 a.m. liftoff from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station's Space Launch Complex 41 during a 30-minute window. The launch attempt comes one week since ULA scrubbed because of bad temperature readings on the rocket related to a gaseous nitrogen purge line. 'Sorted the issue,' said ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno calling it an unintentional wet dress rehearsal. While ULA is only making its second launch of the year, SpaceX earlier Monday morning launched its 50th mission from the Space Coast. A Falcon 9 lifted off from Canaveral's nearby Space Launch Complex 40 at 1:58 a.m. with 27 Starlink satellites. The first-stage booster flew for the 25th time landing on the droneship A Shortfall of Gravitas. SpaceX has now launched more than 9,000 Starlink satellites since 2019. For ULA, the Atlas V is one of only 14 left in ULA's stable, seven of which are set aside for Amazon as the company looks to get more than 3,200 of its Project Kuiper satellites into orbit by 2028. ULA's first launch of the year in April was also for Amazon sending up the constellation's first 27 operational satellites. The company also purchased an additional 38 launches on ULA's new Vulcan rocket as well as missions on Blue Origin, Arianespace and even SpaceX. In total, Amazon has lined up more than 80 flights as it tries to play catchup to SpaceX, which has launched close to 9,000 of its Starlink satellites since 2019. While the satellites are manufactured in Washington, Amazon has built a $120 million satellite processing facility at a nearly 80-acre site at the Kennedy Space Center's former Shuttle Landing Facility where they will get the final preparations for launch such as fueling. For now, ULA is the only company proliferating the constellation, and Vulcan has the lion's share of contracted missions. ULA has only flown its Vulcan rocket twice so far, both in 2024, but is expecting to fly it a third time as early as July on a national security mission for the Space Force. ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno said that after that mission, Vulcan would fly its first Project Kuiper flight, one during which Vulcan would have six solid rocket boosters in its most powerful configuration. After that, Amazon missions will jump back and forth between Vulcan and remaining six contracted Atlas V rockets. Vulcan rockets have a larger capacity than Atlas V and would be able to carry 45 Project Kuiper satellites per launch. Amazon has a goal of getting more than half of the planned constellation into orbit before July 2026 as part of requirements put forth by its Federal Communications Commission license. To increase launch cadence, ULA has been building out a second vertical integration facility in Cape Canaveral so it can prepare two rockets for launch at the same time. Its goal is to ramp up to at least two launches per month on the Space Coast. It also has launch capability from California. ULA had only five launches total in 2024 including the final Delta IV Heavy launch from Space Launch Complex 37. SpaceX under the direction of the Space Force demolished the launch tower at SLC-37 last week in preparation to build out new launch facilities to support its in-development Starship and Super Heavy rockets. While SpaceX will continue launches from SLC-40 and Kennedy Space Center, ULA will focus its Space Coast operations entirely from SLC-41. ULA still has seven other Atlas V rockets set aside for other customers. One is for communications company ViaSat and six are assigned to Boeing Starliner launches, so the final flight for Atlas V may not come until as late as 2030. ULA has a backlog of more than 70 missions including 24 for national security. Its Vulcan rocket was only certified for those launches this spring after years of the delays in the rocket's development. Bruno has said ULA would like to ramp up to at least 24 launches per year by the end of 2026. The company formed as a partnership between Boeing and Lockheed Martin in 2006 and had been the primary launch provider for national security missions until SpaceX joined the competition. The most missions the company has flown in a single year has been 16 in 2009.

Watch this Atlas rocket zip to the launchpad for Amazon's Kuiper launch
Watch this Atlas rocket zip to the launchpad for Amazon's Kuiper launch

Digital Trends

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Digital Trends

Watch this Atlas rocket zip to the launchpad for Amazon's Kuiper launch

United Launch Alliance (ULA) has started the countdown clock for the deployment of Amazon's second batch of Project Kuiper internet satellites. The rocket operator released a time-lapse video on Sunday showing the Atlas V rocket moving from the Vehicle Assembly Building to the launchpad at Cape Canaveral in Florida. ULA chief Tory Bruno noted that while the rocket appears to hurtle to its destination, the vehicle carrying it is actually moving at a mere 3 mph. Mighty Atlas out for a stroll and back on the pad. Ps this is a time-lapse. IRL, the 2.5M pound Mobile Launch Platform travels at a blistering 3 mph or so. — Tory Bruno (@ 2025-06-21T18:39:04.920Z The mission was supposed to get away last week but technical issues and weather concerns caused the launch date to shift to Monday. Recommended Videos When the Atlas V heads skyward at 6:54 a.m. ET on Monday morning, it'll deploy 27 Project Kuiper satellites to a low-Earth orbit, joining the 27 satellites launched by the same rocket in April. Similar to SpaceX's Starlink service, Amazon's Project Kuiper is designed to bring fast, reliable internet to customers and communities around the world, with a particular focus on unserved and underserved communities. But having started its satellite deployment in 2019, and now with a constellation of more than 7,000 serving more than 5 million customers globally, Starlink is currently some distance ahead of Project Kuiper. Amazon is aiming for a constellation of more than 3,200 satellites, which it aims to have in place by the end of this decade. Before then, possibly before the end of this year, Amazon hopes to be able to start offering a high-speed, low-latency internet service with just 1,000 satellites in low-Earth orbit. Expanding the constellation to the planned 3,200 satellites will enhance network performance and reliability for customers. The e-commerce giant and cloud services powerhouse is investing more than $10 billion in Project Kuiper, which is expected to significantly expand global internet access. If you're interested in watching the launch as it happens, here's everything you need to know.

ULA launch delayed for Amazon's 2nd batch of 27 'Project Kuiper' satellites
ULA launch delayed for Amazon's 2nd batch of 27 'Project Kuiper' satellites

Yahoo

time16-06-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

ULA launch delayed for Amazon's 2nd batch of 27 'Project Kuiper' satellites

June 16 (UPI) -- The United Launch Alliance liftoff planned for Monday with dozens of new satellites to join Amazon's "Project Kuiper" mission was delayed due to engineering issues. The project is part of Amazon's effort to expand global Internet access. Amazon's second attempted Kuiper 2 launch of 27 additional satellites into low-Earth orbit on top ULA's 205-foot tall Atlas V rocket was delayed shortly before 1 p.m. EDT due to an "engineering observation of an elevated purge temperature within the booster engine," according to ULA officials. It originally was scheduled to launch during a 30-minute time window starting at 1:25 p.m. EDT from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on Space Launch Complex 41. The mission is an effort to boost Amazon's growing satellite constellation to a total of 54 launched out of the mandated 1,600 in about a year's time as part of a federal agreement. "The team will evaluate the hardware, and we will release a new launch date when available," the Colorado-headquartered ULA added. A live-stream broadcast started roughly 20 minutes or so on multiple online platforms prior to the temporarily delayed liftoff with initial weather forecasts predicting a 75% chance for favorable conditions. The ULA rocket designated AV-105 would have been the 103rd launch of its Atlas 5 rocket. ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno wrote during Monday's countdown in a Bluesky post that United Launch Alliance team members at the the time were "working a temperature measurement (that was) warmer than previous" Atlas 5 rocket launches. It was set to be ULA's second sendoff on Atlas 5 for Amazon's Project Kuiper after ULA successfully sent a first batch of 27 satellites in early April. That first mission's own initial liftoff was likewise scrubbed, but due to weather. Amazon officials say it Projectt Kuiper will aim to deliver "fast, reliable Internet to customers and communities around the world" with a goal to launch and install more than 3,200 satellites in space by the end of next year, which was a required timeframe part of its agreement with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, or FCC. Meanwhile, a new launch date has yet to be announced.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store