SPACEX continued to publish the Quick Starlink on Tuesday night (May 6), as it unloaded 28 satellites on the Internet to the Falcon 9 missile from the Cape Canaveral Space Station in Florida. The same was at 9:17 pm EST (0117 GMT on May 7) from the launch complex -40, on the occasion of the company’s launch 53 of the Falcon 9 for the company for the year 2025 and 36 from the dedicated Starlink mission this year. The loader provides a load in connection all over the world by adding the SPACEX group that has been expanded at a speed of more than 7,200 satellites in the low -Earth orbit.
Spacex Falcon 9 28 Starlink Sarellitees, smoothly at sea
According to a Space.com Report, B1085, the supportive supporter in the first stage, carried out a perfect main engine after about 2.5 minutes of launch, then separated the theater and burned back to stop its descent. About eight minutes after the launch, the B1085 succeeded on the independent drone ship, stationed in the Atlantic Ocean. The task was the seventh journey of this particular supporter, which had been supported by two other tasks.
The upper stage in the Falcon 9 continued in orbit and the 28 Starlink satellites were published after about one hour of launch. These newly deployed units spend several days to control their positions before integration into the broader Starlink network, which are now determined by most of the world except for the polar regions. Each satellite, compressed but equipped with large solar matrices, is part of the largest network responsible for providing high -speed satellite online.
The May 6 launch shows how quickly SpaceX moves to achieve broad range goals. In addition to the Falcon 9 tasks, the company conducted two championships this year’s championship test to show development progress in both satellite launch and heavy recovery capacity.
The expansion constellation will finally bring reliable internet coverage to distant sites around the world. The drive to provide a reliable internet connection to distant sites worldwide reflects an obligation to place the world on hand.