Privately owned Space
Exploration Technologies was selected to launch a trio of Canadian radar
satellites aboard a single Falcon 9 rocket, the company announced on Tuesday.
The California-based
firm, also known as SpaceX, already is flying NASA cargo to the International
Space Station, a permanently staffed research outpost that flies about 250
miles above Earth.
Owned and operated by
Internet entrepreneur Elon Musk, the company is also working on a space taxi to
fly astronauts to the orbital outpost.
A relative newcomer to
the U.S. launch industry, SpaceX's client roster includes communication
satellite operators Iridium, Intelsat SA, Orbcomm, Europe's SES, Hong Kong's
Asia Satellite Telecommunications and Israel's Space Communication Ltd.
Also on SpaceX's launch
manifest are spacecraft for the U.S. Air Force, NASA's science office and the
governments of Thailand, Argentina and Taiwan.
"Our tally is
nearly 50 launches," SpaceX spokeswoman Christina Ra wrote in an email to Reuters.
So far, the company has
flown its Falcon 9 rocket five times, all from its Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station launch site in Florida. The missions include two test flights and two
space station cargo runs for the U.S. space agency, which contributed about
$400 million toward the Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon capsule development.
SpaceX's 12-flight
cargo delivery contract with NASA is worth another $1.6 billion. NASA also has
a separate $525 million investment in SpaceX to upgrade its Falcon 9 rocket and
Dragon capsule to carry people.
SpaceX's next mission,
slated for September, will be to launch a Canadian Space Agency solar science
satellite called CASSIOPE from a new launch complex at Vandenberg Air Force
Base in California.
Both CASSIOPE and the
three-radar satellite now included in SpaceX's manifest are built by Canada's
MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates Ltd, which selected SpaceX for the launches.
"SpaceX
appreciates MDA's confidence in our ability to safely and reliably transport
their satellites," SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell said in a statement.
The radar satellite
network, which is slated to fly in 2018, is designed for maritime surveillance,
disaster management and environmental monitoring.
Terms of the contract
were not disclosed, but SpaceX's website lists the cost of a Falcon 9 rocket at
$56.5 million.
(Reporting by Irene
Klotz in Capre Canaveral, Florida; Editing by Tom Brown and Lisa Shumaker)
Source: Yahoo news.
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