产品展示
  • 大众途铠tcross配件装饰用品汽车改装后门防护贴后备箱尾箱后护板
  • 适用于长安金牛星前保险杠金牛星后保险杠原车配件前杠加厚带漆
  • 适用于长安CS35保险杠前后护杠CS35前后杠CS35PLUS防护杠改装配件
  • 适配解放J6P/L原厂汽车配件油门开关离合器开关刹车灯制动感应塞
  • 汽车装饰贴纸 车贴搞笑 卡通可爱划痕车门贴 亲嘴小破孩个性创意
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

产品中心

SpaceX sends another batch of Starlink satellites into space

2024-05-18 21:08:07      点击:062

Elon Musk's private space company added 60 more satellites Monday to its goal of nearly 45,000 for a global internet network called Starlink.

The satellite constellation is a work-in-progress to bring internet connectivity to, well, everywhere. The first 60 were launched in May, and on Monday morning 60 more of the approximately 500-pound devices made it into orbit from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.

The second Starlink deployment from SpaceX's Flacon 9 rocket (it's a 1.2 million-pound spacecraft) was a success. There's still more to come in 2019, and SpaceX plans to launch monthly Starlink missions in 2020. We'll be at full network capacity in no time. Just last month, SpaceX applied for 30,000 more satellites, which you can add onto the 12,000 the U.S. Federal Communications Commission already approved.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

Once the entire constellation is in low Earth orbit (just about 300 miles away) by 2027, possibly later if the bigger constellation size gets rubber-stamped, it's expected to offer high-speed internet to anywhere on Earth. Last month SpaceX CEO Elon Musk supposedly sent a tweet using the Starlink network.

SEE ALSO:Looks like Elon Musk just tweeted using the Starlink internet

The low-orbit satellites don't just mean fast, affordable internet connections and telecommunications achievements. Concerns about space debris, light interference, and other issues for astronomers are still up in the air. In SpaceX's promotional materials about the Starlink mission, it claims the satellites are designed so that "95 percent of all components of this design will quickly burn in Earth’s atmosphere at the end of each satellite’s lifecycle."

@广东桑蚕产业人员,收好这份桑园洪涝灾后重建的对策和措施
N. Korea defends military spy satellite as 'indispensable strategic option'