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Iridium-7 Next Up for SpaceX

Posted by Chris Tobias on July 23, 2018
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Elon Musk, Falcon 9, Iridium NEXT, Iridium-7, Just Read the Instructions, SpaceX, Vandenberg AFB. Leave a comment
Iridium-7

(Image: America Space)

by Chris Tobias

Elon Musk and company are ready to send another Falcon 9 into the black this Wednesday, just days after SpaceX successfully completed the Telstar 19 mission.  This time the action will be on the West Coast.

On July 25, a Falcon 9 of the new Block 5 variant will launch from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.  The mission is Iridium-7, the latest in a series of what is expected to be a total of eight missions to put 75 Iridium NEXT satellites in orbit.  Once completed, the mission will bring the number of deployed satellites to 65.  Liftoff is scheduled for 7:39 am EDT (11:39 UTC).

The Iridium-7 mission will insert a constellation of 10 new satellites into Low Earth Orbit as part of Iridium Communications ongoing effort to overhaul its communications fleet.  The first stage of this particular Block 5 Falcon 9, which is making its maiden flight, will land on SpaceX’s drone recovery ship Just Read the Instructions in the Pacific Ocean.  The mission will mark SpaceX’s 14th flight of this calendar year.

As usual, live coverage of the launch will be available via SpaceX’s webcast, which should go live approximately 20 minutes before liftoff at spacex.com and on the company’s YouTube channel.

Peace, love and rockets…

SpaceX to Launch Next-Gen Comms Satellite in Early Morning

Posted by Chris Tobias on July 21, 2018
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Falcon 9, Landing, SpaceX. Leave a comment

telstar-19vby Jeff Cunningham

In the early hours of Sunday, the 22nd of July, Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) will launch the Telstar 19 Vantage (or 19V) high-bandwidth satellite aboard the Falcon 9 rocket between the hours of 0150-0550, EST. Continue Reading

“The Serenity Handbook” Is a Worthy Addition to Any Browncoat’s Library

Posted by Chris Tobias on July 2, 2018
Posted in: Articles, Reviews. Tagged: Battle of Serenity Valley, Browncoats, Firefly, Insight Editions, Malcolm Reynolds, Marc Sumerak, Serenity, The Serenity Handbook. Leave a comment

(Update:  Shortly after this review was originally posted we received an email from Insight Editions with a message from the book’s editor regarding the issue of Mal’s and Zoe’s rank in the Independent Army.  Here’s the explanation we received:

“In most of the flashback sequences and supplementary material, we know that Mal and Zoe were officially ranked as Sergeant and Corporal respectively during the Unification War. According to the movie, Serenity, however, Mal’s rank is listed as “Captain, Independent Army” (as seen on the Alliance files shown on the Operative’s screen at 36:38.)  The “Criminal Record” on Page 9 directly reflects the Alliance’s files on Mal as shown on-screen.

From what I could piece together, this discrepancy in title was likely due to an unofficial battlefield promotion earned in the thick of it all during the Battle of Serenity Valley, when many of Mal’s superior officers were killed and he had to rise through the ranks and take command of around 2,000 troops. The promotion was one that would never be officially reflected in the Independent Army records (obviously, due to their surrender), but was just official enough to be noted in the Alliance records upon Mal’s post-battle processing. Of course, the fact that the soldiers in the pilot episode of Firefly (“Serenity”) still call Mal “Sergeant” during the Battle of Serenity Valley could also mean that Mal lied to the Alliance about his rank when captured… or that the Alliance later assumed that he was a Captain in the Independent Army based on the fact that he was widely known to be a Captain (of Serenity) after the war. Either way, the choice was made to reflect the on-screen Alliance files accurately in his “Criminal Record” section in this book.

As for Zoe’s rank, all my records seem to show her as Corporal, as reflected in her official Independent Army records on Page 21. So when she states on Page 20 that she was a lieutenant, well, I’m frankly not sure how or why that happened. I would love to say that she received a similar unofficial promotion as Mal in those final battles… but the truth is, as far as I can tell, it seems to have just been an unfortunate error that didn’t get caught along the way. My sincere apologies for the confusion.”

Insight Editions has indicated that they will attempt to fix any errors in the book before they run any reprints. — Chris)
Original Post:

by Chris Tobias

In recent months we’ve seen a number of new Firefly and Serenity products hit the market as 20th Century Fox and Universal Studios have expanded the amount of officially licensed merchandise that is available to fans.  One of the benefits has been that there is a new wave of books that are scheduled to hit the shelves featuring brand new stories about our favorite Firefly-class transport ship and its crew.  In February it was announced that Titan Books would publish a new series of original Firefly novels that will debut this October, but Browncoats won’t have to wait that long to delve into a book that takes a fresh look at Serenity and her crew.

Cyan Magenta Yellow Black

Courtesy Insight Editions

This week Insight Editions will release Marc Sumerak’s The Serenity Handbook:  The Official Crew Member’s Guide to the Firefly-Class Series 3 Ship.  I recently had the opportunity to preview this impressive book, which reads like a manual that is a clever mixture of technical blueprints and crew members’ first-hand descriptions of Serenity’s features.

Continue Reading

CRS-15: SpaceX Is Making Everything Old New Again

Posted by Chris Tobias on June 27, 2018
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Browncoats, Canadarm2, Cape Canaveral, Crew Dragon, CRS-15, Dragon, Elon Musk, Falcon 9, International Space Station, Lewis and Clark, NASA, National Park Service, National Trail System, Peter Allen, Serenity, SLC-40, Space Shuttle, SpaceX, TESS, Titan. Leave a comment

by Chris Tobias

“Don’t throw the past away
You might need it some rainy day
Dreams can come true again
When everything old is new again”

Those words are from Peter Allen’s 1974 song “Everything Old is New Again,” but in a lot of ways, they’re describing how SpaceX is approaching the way it does business today.

800px-SpaceX_CRS-15_Patch

NASA’s official CRS-15 mission patch.

Let’s not be misunderstood.  SpaceX is employing a lot of new technology and a lot of innovative techniques that are revolutionizing the space industry.  But one of those new techniques is the reuse of the boosters and vehicles that contain its new technology, and that concept– using old rockets and spaceships for new missions– is something that is rather innovative in and of itself.  Admittedly, even that isn’t a completely new idea– NASA’s Space Shuttle program relied on the same concept to a certain extent– but SpaceX is taking it to new heights.

When SpaceX launches its fifteenth commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station at 5:41am EDT (9:41 UTC) on June 29, there will be a lot about CRS-15, from its Falcon 9 booster to its Dragon capsule and even the launch complex itself, that will feature something old that’s been given new purpose.  The Falcon 9 that will launch CRS-15 into the black was previously flown during the TESS mission two months ago.  The Dragon capsule that it will carry was used during SpaceX’s ninth resupply mission to the ISS back in 2016.  And Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, the place from which the mission will liftoff, has a storied history that goes all the way back to the Titan launches in the 1960’s. Continue Reading

SpaceX Set to Launch SES-12 June 1

Posted by Chris Tobias on May 30, 2018
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Cape Canaveral, Falcon 9, GO Pursuit, SES-12, SLC-40, SpaceX, X-37B. Leave a comment

by Chris Tobias

It’s a pretty safe bet SpaceX will launch the first rocket of the month of June.

Falcon_9_logo_irl

Image:  Space Agency Wiki

A Falcon 9 will head out to the black in the early morning hours of June 1 to deliver the SES-12 satellite into geostationary transfer orbit (GTO).  Liftoff is scheduled for 12:29am EDT (4:29 UTC) from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.  SES-12 is designed to improve communication and connectivity in the Middle East and Asia-Pacific regions.

The Falcon 9 booster for this mission is flight-proven, having previously flown the OTV-5 mission that carried the Air Force’s top secret mini-shuttle, the X-37B, into orbit.  There are no plans for the first stage of the Falcon 9 to land during this mission, however SpaceX does plan to retrieve the fairings from the ocean as they have on several of their more recent missions.  (GO Pursuit, SpaceX’s Atlantic “fairing hunter” boat, was observed heading out to sea May 29.)

pursuit

GO Pursuit, SpaceX’s Atlantic “fairing hunter” boat, is stationed at Port Canaveral. (Image:  Guice Offshore)

Current forecasts show that the weather is only 40% favorable for the primary launch date, though it increases to 60% favorable 24 hours later for the backup launch date.

For those night owls who want to watch the mission, SpaceX’s live webcast of the launch will begin approximately 20 minutes before liftoff at spacex.com and on the company’s YouTube channel.

Peace, love and rockets…

SpaceX Turns Two with Launch from Vandenberg on Tuesday

Posted by Chris Tobias on May 21, 2018
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Falcon 9, GRACE-FO, Iridium NEXT, Iridium-6, Mr. Steven, SLC-4E, SpaceX, Vandenberg Air Force Base, Zuma. Leave a comment

by Chris Tobias

SpaceX will make it a double when it launches its next Falcon 9 into the black from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg AFB in California on Tuesday, May 22.  The “Block 4” Falcon 9, which flew previously for that top-secret ZUMA mission back in November, will carry two satellite payloads into Low Earth Polar Orbit– Iridium-6 and GRACE-FO.

The instantaneous launch window will open at 3:47 EST (19:47 UTC).  The GRACE-FO satellites will deploy early in the mission (less than twelve minutes after liftoff).  The five Iridium NEXT satellites will deploy roughly an hour into the mission.

As the name suggests, Iridium-6 will be the sixth mission SpaceX has flown for Iridium as it replaces and upgrades the world’s largest commercial satellite network.  At the conclusion of this mission, SpaceX will have just two missions remaining for Iridium, after which it will have delivered a total of 75 new satellites into orbit– 66 operational satellites and nine on-orbit spares.  The ongoing Iridium NEXT mission is one of the largest “tech upgrades” in space history.

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Meanwhile, the NASA/German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ) GRACE Follow-On (GRACE-FO) mission is intended to continue GRACE’s 15-year legacy of tracking the movement of Earth’s mass.  These twin satellites will allow the distribution of Earth’s mass to be mapped monthly and tracked over larger periods of time.  This will, in turn, provide valuable data about climate change, including changes in ice sheets and glaciers, water levels in large lakes and rivers as well as sea level, and various water and energy cycles.

Since the Falcon 9 being used for this mission is a “Block 4” model, it is unlikely that there will be a landing of the rocket’s first stage.  SpaceX will attempt to capture the fairings, however, and Mr. Steven, the company’s “spider-boat” that was designed especially for that purpose, is already at sea.

Those who would like to follow the mission’s progress can catch SpaceX’s live webcast, which will begin approximately 20 minutes before liftoff at spacex.com and on the company’s YouTube channel.

Peace, love and rockets…

A Firefly and Serenity Timeline

Posted by Chris Tobias on May 14, 2018
Posted in: Articles. Tagged: Bangabandhu-1, Block 5, Browncoats, Can't Stop the Serenity, Cape Canaveral, Crew Dragon, Dark Horse Comics, Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, Dragon, Elon Musk, Falcon9, Firefly, Gwynne Shotwell, International Space Station, Joss Whedon, Malcolm Reynolds, River Tam, Serenity, Space Shuttle Atlantis, SpaceX, Zoe Alleyne. 1 Comment
by Chris Tobias
In the wake of this weekend’s successful Bangabandhu-1 mission, which featured the successful launch and landing of the new Block 5 Falcon 9, SpaceX is taking a full eight days off between launches.  (Let that sink in for a minute.  We now have a private space company that’s basically launching once a week… but I digress.)  Since we have a little time before we have to discuss the specifics of the next mission, I figured I’d devote some space (yes, the pun is always intended) to a Browncoat-themed post.
CSTS2018_Plain_Logo_Mid
Take Back the Sky is not the only cause to which this Browncoat devotes his time and energy.  Since 2013, I have also been the organizer of the annual Can’t Stop the Serenity (CSTS) charity screenings of Serenity (and occasionally Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog) for the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  As a CSTS organizer, I have access to the global CSTS message boards at www.cantstoptheserenity.com, which really have a plethora of great information in their archives that any hardcore Browncoat would love to read through if he or she had the time.  In fact, it was on these very message boards that Jeff first proposed the idea of lobbying SpaceX to name its first Crew Dragon after Serenity.
Since only the organizers or co-organizers (think captains and first mates) of local CSTS events have access to the boards’ archives, I think it’s a shame that a lot of Browncoats will never have the chance to read some of the interesting things that are contained there.  So, seeing as how I’m an organizer who has that virtual all-access pass, I decided to share one of them with you.
The following is a chronological list of important dates in the history of Firefly and Serenity, presented in calendar format.  It appears almost exactly as it was originally posted on the global CSTS message boards, though I have made a few minor modifications for the sake of clarity and ease of reading.

Continue Reading

SpaceX Bangabandhu-1 Launch Set for May 10

Posted by Chris Tobias on May 9, 2018
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Bangabandhu-1, BFR, Block 5, Cape Canaveral, Crew Dragon, Elon Musk, Falcon 9, Falcon Heavy, International Space Station, Kennedy Space Center, LC-39A, Of Course I Still Love You, Serenity, SpaceX. Leave a comment
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Courtesy SpaceX Updates via Twitter

by Chris Tobias

On May 10, SpaceX is scheduled to launch the Bangabandhu-1 satellite to geostationary transfer orbit from Launch Complex 39-A (LC-39A) at Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Bangabandhu-1 will be Bangladesh’s first geostationary communications satellite.  Its name means “friend of Bengal,” and it is named in honor of the founding father of the nation of Bangladesh.  It is designed to provide communications services to Bangladesh and surrounding countries for at least the next 15 years.

The Falcon 9 that will carry Bangabandhu-1 into the black is scheduled to liftoff at 16:12 EST (20:12 UTC) on Thursday.  The mission will also feature a landing of the Falcon 9’s first stage at sea aboard the SpaceX drone barge Of Course I Still Love You.

The highlight of the mission, however, will be the debut of the new “Block 5” variant of the Falcon 9.  The Block 5 features a number of design upgrades that are intended to improve the rocket’s efficiency and safety, while allowing SpaceX to refly each first stage booster as many as ten times or more.  (None of the previous Falcon 9 boosters have broken atmo more than twice.)

Falcon-9-Block-5-1046-rollout-Elon-Musk-1024x683

SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk released this photo of the rollout of the Block 5 variant of the Falcon 9, which will launch on May 10.

SpaceX has indicated that the Block 5 will be the final variant of their workhorse Falcon 9.  The company will now concentrate on the development of its BFR, or “Big Falcon Rocket,” as well as the production of the Falcon Heavy (the rocket that we hope will soon carry US astronauts to the International Space Station aboard a Crew Dragon named Serenity), while its Block 5 fleet of Falcon 9 rockets handles SpaceX’s ambitious manifest of scheduled commercial satellite launches.

Those who want to see the new Falcon 9 Block 5 in action can watch Thursday’s launch online.  As is usually the case, SpaceX’s live coverage of the launch will begin on spacex.com and the company’s YouTube channel approximately 20 minutes prior to liftoff.

Peace, love and rockets…

A Fond Look Back at “Sending a Wave”

Posted by Chris Tobias on April 29, 2018
Posted in: Articles, Press Coverage, Updates. Tagged: A Quiet Place, Adam Baldwin, Apollo 11, Blade Runner 2049, Browncoat Ball, Browncoats, Can't Stop the Serenity, Creation Convention, Crew Dragon, Discovery, Elon Musk, Enterprise, Falcon 9, Firefly, Gina Torres, Gwynne Shotwell, ISS, James Bond, Jewel Staite, Joss Whedon, Lost in Space, Millennium Falcon, NASA, Nathan Fillion, Ryan Gosling, Sending a Wave, Sense8, Serenity, SpaceX, Star Trek, Star Wars, Summer Glau, The 100, The Expanse, The Handmaid's Tale, The Leftovers, Tranquility, Westworld, Wizard World. Leave a comment
iTam2

(Image:  Sending a Wave)

by Chris Tobias

On March 31, the UK Firefly and Serenity podcast Sending a Wave announced that it was coming to an end after twelve years of keeping Browncoats around the world up-to-date on all the latest conjurings in the Firefly fandom throughout the ‘verse.  Sending a Wave will always be very special to all of us here at Take Back the Sky, because the podcast was the first media outlet to interview Jeff and me (way back in the 2012) about our efforts to convince Elon Musk and SpaceX to name their first Crew Dragon Serenity.  Not only did our interview on Sending a Wave spread the news of what we were doing to a worldwide audience, it also gave our campaign a level of legitimacy in the Browncoat community that it hadn’t had previously.  This was especially crucial to the success of our first online petition to SpaceX, which ended up with thousands of signatures from every continent except Antarctica, accompanied by comments in multiple languages.

About a year later we had the pleasure of meeting Wendy Scott, co-creator and host of Sending a Wave, in person at Wizard World Philadelphia Comic Con in June of 2013.  At the con that weekend, Wendy interviewed me again about my work as the event coordinator of Pittsburgh’s Can’t Stop the Serenity charity screenings, and together we attended the Firefly panel that featured Adam Baldwin, Summer Glau, Jewel Staite and Gina Torres.  Wendy is a lovely woman who is tremendously knowledgeable about science-fiction and the film industry and an absolutely fascinating person to talk to.  One of my favorite things about Wendy, both as a podcast host and as a friend, is that her “BS-meter” is finely-tuned, and she’s not afraid to call anyone out if their story has the odor of a fabrication or a retcon.  (If you don’t believe me, you can hear her give me a much-needed history lesson upon our first meeting in Sending a Wave Episode 93:  The One with Dragons!)

When I heard about the end of Sending a Wave, I contacted Wendy to ask her if it would be okay if I achieved some closure of sorts by bringing things full circle and interviewing her about what had been great run of a groundbreaking Firefly and Serenity podcast.  She graciously agreed, and on April 28 we spent nearly three hours on Skype talking about everything from the podcast itself to geek culture, science-fiction of all kinds, Joss Whedon, CSTS, the current state of the film industry and even American and European politics.  As you can guess, that conversation meandered in many different directions.  The following is a transcript of questions Wendy answered that were specific to Sending a Wave:

Continue Reading

SpaceX Is Launching a Planet Hunter Named TESS

Posted by Chris Tobias on April 15, 2018
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Cape Canaveral, CRS-15, Dragon, Falcon 9, International Space Station, NASA, Of Course I Still Love You, SLC-40, SpaceX, TESS. Leave a comment

(UPDATE:  This launch was scrubbed on Monday, and is currently targeted for Wednesday, April 18 at 6:51 EDT.  At a NASA social event for TESS on April 15, SpaceX Vice President of Build and Flight Reliability Hans Koenigsmann said there is, in fact, a launch opportunity for TESS every day through April 26.)

by Chris Tobias

This Monday, April 16, SpaceX will launch a Falcon 9 from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.  The launch, which is scheduled to lift off at 6:32 pm EDT (22:32 UTC), will feature a brand new Falcon 9 booster rocket that has never flown before.  Unlike some of the more recent SpaceX missions, there are plans to recover the first stage of this Falcon 9 at sea aboard SpaceX’s drone ship Of Course I Still Love You.  If that recovery is successful, this particular Falcon 9 will be reused for the CRS-15 Dragon resupply mission to the International Space Station this summer.

This current mission is generating some buzz because of its payload.  SpaceX is sending a NASA satellite into orbit that is known as the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS.  The satellite is designed to conduct a two-year survey during which it will use an array of telescopes to monitor over 200,000 stars in “neighboring solar systems” (less than 300 light years away) in order to detect and identify planets ranging in size from roughly the size of the Earth to gas giants, with a particular interest in identifying Earth-like exoplanets that could one day (or perhaps once did or even already do) support life.

tess_project_summary_chart_01-06-17

(courtesy nasa.gov)

There is a 30-second launch window for tomorrow’s launch, but there is the possibility of launching on Tuesday if Monday’s launch has to be scrubbed.  If SpaceX misses that back-up window, then they’ll have to wait until the moon comes around again.  This is because once the satellite is deployed it needs the help of a perfectly-timed gravitational assist from the moon in order to put it into a highly eccentric orbit that will bring it close to Earth approximately once every two weeks.  At present, the weather is 80% GO for an April 16 launch, and 90% GO for a Tuesday backup launch if necessary.

For those who’d like to watch the launch, SpaceX’s live webcast of the mission will begin approximately 20 minutes before liftoff at spacex.com and on the company’s YouTube channel.

Peace, love and rockets…

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