All GNSS Attend, But Galileo Gets the Spotlight
March 30, 2015
First and foremost, let’s give a big hand to Adam and Anastasia, the two Galileo FOC satellites that […]
Read More
First and foremost, let’s give a big hand to Adam and Anastasia, the two Galileo FOC satellites that […]
UPDATE: The two Galileo satellites are confirmed separated from their Soyuz Fregat upper stage into 22,522 altitude orbit right on schedule, according […]
In August 2014, they were considered lost: Two Galileo satellites ended in the wrong orbit after their launch […]
News courtesy of the CANSPACE Listserv. The launch of the next BeiDou satellite is predicted to occur at about […]
The seventh and eighth Galileo satellites are scheduled for launch Friday, and will be live streamed from the European Space Agency website.
The U.S. Air Force’s ninth GPS Block IIF satellite (GPS IIF-9) launched on time Wednesday at 2:36 p.m. EDT (1836 GMT) from Space Launch Complex 37 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. The GPS satellite has been deployed by the Delta IV rocket.
Thousands of engineers have worked on the seventh and eighth navigation satellites of Europe’s Galileo constellation in recent years, but last Friday marked the very last time the spacecraft were glimpsed by human eyes.
The Soyuz for Arianespace’s next medium-lift mission is in the launch zone at French Guiana, where it stands ready […]
Follow Us