Rocket Lab conducted its second Electron launch today placing three cubesats into orbit.
The launch occurred from the remote M?hia Peninsula in New Zealand. Mission control is located in Auckland, New Zealand. On board was a Planetlab cubesat named Dove Pioneer which will conduct Earth resource imaging and two Lemur-2 cubesats for Spire which will be used for weather and ship tracking.
In all of its social media postings the company used #stilltesting tag to denote the fact that these initial launches still involve significant testing and proof-of-concept studies.
According to Rockel Lab’s website; “Peter Beck, Founder and CEO of Rocket Lab, says the test is an important next step in democratizing access to space to empower humanity. “Increased access to space will vastly improve humanity’s ability to build out orbital infrastructure, such as constellations of weather and Earth-imaging satellites. These will provide better data about our planet and enable us as a species to make informed decisions about how we better manage our impact. This test launch is a crucial next step in gathering more data about the Electron launch vehicle so we can deliver on this future,” he says.”
Huge congrats to @RocketLab for achieving orbit — massive milestone for that team & for the space renaissance! (& thanks for putting a @planetlabs dove in orbit- we’ve made contact & satellite is & v prelim orbit track looks good 🙂
— Will Marshall (@wsm1) January 21, 2018
Just got a couple of incredible images from our friends at @RocketLab. Welcome to space, LEMUR2-TALLHAMN-ATC and LEMUR2-MARSHALL! Good clean deployment – a great to start to their many orbits of data collection! pic.twitter.com/40PJWQJERp
— Spire (@SpireGlobal) January 21, 2018