Rocket Lab Secures
Multi-Launch Contract with HawkEye 360, Confirms
First Launch Planned from Virginia
April 19, 2022
Rocket Lab ( has been selected
by Virginia-based HawkEye 360 to launch three
Electron missions for the radio frequency geospatial
analytics provider. The first of the three missions
is schedled to be Rocket Lab’s inaugural Electron
mission from Launch Complex 2 on Wallops Island,
Virginia, ushering in an era of Rocket Lab launches
from U.S. soil from no earlier than December 2022.
The multi-launch contract with
HawkEye 360 will see Rocket Lab deliver 15
satellites (five clusters) to low Earth orbit across
three Electron missions anticipated between late
2022 and 2024. Rocket Lab will first deploy three
HawkEye 360 satellites as part of a rideshare
mission, followed by six satellites each on two
dedicated Electron launches.
The first HawkEye 360 mission
is scheduled to launch from Rocket Lab Launch
Complex 2 at Virginia Space’s Mid-Atlantic Regional
Spaceport within NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility – a
dedicated pad for Electron launches developed to
support missions from U.S. soil for government and
commercial customers. Encouraged by NASA’s recent
progress in certifying its Autonomous Flight
Termination Unit (NAFTU) software, which is required
to enable Electron launches from Virginia, Rocket
Lab has scheduled the mission from Launch Complex 2
no earlier than December 2022. With Launch Complex 2
joining Rocket Lab’s two operational launch pads at
Launch Complex 1 in Mahia NZ, Rocket Lab can provide
even greater flexibility over schedule, launch
frequency and launch location to its global
customers. Supporting Rocket Lab’s vertical
integration strategy, Rocket Lab will also supply
HawkEye 360 with separation systems produced by
Planetary Systems Corporation, a Maryland-based
space hardware company acquired by Rocket Lab in
December 2021.
Rocket Lab founder and CEO,
Peter Beck, says: “I’m thrilled to welcome HawkEye
360 onto Electron’s manifest and especially looking
forward to launching our inaugural mission from
Launch Complex 2 in Virginia. Operating multiple
Electron pads across both hemispheres opens up
incredible flexibility for our customers and
delivers assured access to space, something we know
is becoming increasingly critical as launch
availability wanes worldwide. This contract also
demonstrates continued execution on our vertical
integration strategy, in this case bringing reliable
launch and flight proven separation systems under
one roof to streamline the integration and launch
process for HawkEye 360.”
HawkEye 360 COO Rob Rainhart
said: “Rocket Lab provides the flexibility we need
to fill out our constellation and reach our desired
orbits. Their service will drive down our revisit
rates in midlatitude AOIs, bringing a higher density
of data to our customers. We’re excited to be
joining the inaugural launch from Virginia, as a
Virginia-based company launching our satellites from
our home state.”
These missions will grow
HawkEye 360’s constellation of radio frequency
monitoring satellites, enabling the company to
better deliver precise mapping of radio frequency
emissions anywhere in the world. By combining radio
frequency emissions data with its analytical tools
and algorithms, HawkEye 360 provides commercial and
government customers with insights that have helped
to detect illegal fishing, poachers in national
parks, GPS radio frequency interference along
international borders, and emergency beacons in
crisis situations.
This agreement is the latest
multi-launch contract for Rocket Lab, adding to a
multi-launch contract for five dedicated Electron
missions for global Internet-of-Things (IoT)
connectivity provider Kinéis to be launched from
2023 onward, as well as one for three dedicated
missions for Earth imaging company Synspective, the
first of which was launched in February 2022.
|