Technology
SpaceX launches first satellites for new US spy constellation
SpaceX on Wednesday launched an inaugural batch of operational spy satellites it built as part of a new US intelligence network designed to significantly upgrade the country's space-based surveillance powers, the first deployment of several more planned this year.
The spy network was revealed in a pair of Reuters reports earlier this year showing SpaceX is building hundreds of satellites for the US National Reconnaissance Office, an intelligence agency, for a vast system in orbit capable of rapidly spotting ground targets almost anywhere in the world.
Northrop GruMMAn (NOC.N), a longtime space and defense contractor, is also involved in the project.
SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in Southern California at 4am EDT on Wednesday, carrying into space what the NRO said was the "first launch of the NRO's proliferated systems featuring responsive collection and rapid data delivery."
"Approximately half a dozen launches supporting NRO's proliferated architecture are planned for 2024, with additional launches expected through 2028," the agency said, without naming the number of satellites deployed.
Militaries and intelligence agencies around the world have increasingly relied on satellites in Earth's orbit to aid operations on Earth, a trend accelerated in part by reduced costs of putting things in space and evolving threats to traditional collection methods on land or in the air.
The satellite network for the NRO also shows the extent to which the US government has come to rely on Elon Musk's SpaceX for some of its most sensitive missions. The company has dominated the US rocket launch market and has become the world's largest satellite operator with its Starlink network, a commercial system of thousands of broadband internet satellites.
-
Technology4h ago
Public health surveillance, from social media to sewage, spots disease outbreaks early to stop them fast
-
Technology6h ago
TikTok, PTA host youth safety summit in Pakistan | The Express Tribune
-
Technology9h ago
Why a Technocracy Fails Young People
-
Technology21h ago
Transplanting insulin-making cells to treat Type 1 diabetes is challenging − but stem cells offer a potential improvement
-
Technology22h ago
Japan's $26 billion deep sea discovery sparks serious environmental concerns | The Express Tribune
-
Technology1d ago
Should I worry about mold growing in my home?
-
Technology1d ago
Blurry, morphing and surreal – a new AI aesthetic is emerging in film
-
Technology1d ago
SpaceX’s Starship advances in spaceflight despite booster landing failure | The Express Tribune