SpaceX on
Wednesday deployed a broadband communications satellite for IntelSat, after
twice ditching launch plans in the final seconds before liftoff earlier this
week.
The
satellite, known as IntelSat 35e, soared into the blue sky over Cape Canaveral
at 7:38 pm (2338 GMT), riding a Falcon 9 rocket to a distant, geostationary
orbit.
The force
required to send the payload to space meant SpaceX decided not to attempt to return
the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket for an upright landing.
The
California-based company now regularly lands the tall portion of the rocket
back on Earth following launches, as part of its effort to make rocket parts
reusable, like airplanes.
The launch
finally went ahead after two delays earlier this week, both in the last 10
seconds before liftoff.
A SpaceX
commentator said on the company’s launch webcast that Monday’s delay came about
when a measurement in the rocket’s first stage avionics system did not meet a
preprogrammed software limit, but the rocket was in good shape.
Nor was the
delay on Sunday due to any flaws with the rocket, SpaceX said.
Engineers
also spent the US Fourth of July holiday reviewing the rocket for safety
issues.
“SpaceX team
reviewed all systems again late last night,” SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk
said on Twitter ahead of the launch.
“Done our
best to ensure all is good.”
The
satellite is the fourth of Intelsat’s EpicNG next-generation high throughput
satellites, and aims to improve wireless connectivity for the Caribbean, Europe
and Africa.
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