Amazon’s Project
Kuiper satellites will fly on the new Vulcan Centaur
rocket in early 2023
October 12, 2022
Project Kuiper, Amazon’s
satellite broadband program, will launch two
prototype satellites on an upcoming United Launch
Alliance mission to test system performance in
space.
Amazon created Project Kuiper
to deliver fast, affordable broadband to unserved
and underserved communities around the world, and
our upcoming prototype mission will move us one step
closer to delivering on that vision. Our first two
satellites—Kuipersat-1 and Kuipersat-2—will be
completed later this year, and we are now planning
to deploy both satellites on the first flight of
United Launch Alliance's (ULA) new Vulcan Centaur
rocket in early 2023.
Prototype mission update
ULA is scheduled to provide 47
launches for our satellite constellation, and using
Vulcan Centaur for this mission will give us
practical experience working together ahead of those
launches. The rocket will launch from Cape Canaveral
Space Force Station in Florida, and our prototype
satellites are scheduled to share the ride with the
Peregrine lunar lander, a NASA-funded spacecraft
from Astrobotic.
A ULA rocket starts to take
launch.
Our prototype mission will help
us test how the different pieces of our satellite
network work together, adding real-world data from
space to results from our extensive lab testing,
fieldwork, and simulation. We’ll use findings from
the mission to help finalize design, deployment, and
operational plans for our commercial satellite
system, which will provide reliable, affordable
broadband to customers around the world.
“We couldn’t be more excited to
join the first launch of ULA’s Vulcan Centaur. We’ve
already secured 38 Kuiper launches on Vulcan, and
using the same launch vehicle for our prototype
mission gives us a chance to practice payload
integration, processing, and mission management
procedures ahead of those full-scale commercial
launches,” said Rajeev Badyal, vice president of
technology for Project Kuiper. “Our prototype
satellites will be ready this year, and we look
forward to flying with ULA.”
Preparing for commercial
launches
Alongside preparations for this
mission, the Project Kuiper team is starting to
scale production to support a full deployment. Our
first production satellites—the more advanced
spacecraft that will power our commercial broadband
service—are scheduled to launch on ULA’s Atlas V
rocket. From there, we will begin to phase in the
Vulcan rocket alongside newer heavy-lift rockets
from two other space launch companies, Arianespace
and Blue Origin.
An image of three rockets
launched outside of the Earth's atmosphere. They
have logos on them including the Amazon logo, the
Blue Origin logo, the ULA logo, and the Arianspace
logo.
Amazon makes historic launch
investment to advance Project Kuiper
With new long-term launch
commitments, Project Kuiper prepares for future
satellite deployments.
Amazon has secured up to 92
launches with ULA, Arianespace, and Blue Origin to
deploy its constellation of 3,236 satellites—marking
the largest commercial procurement of launch
vehicles in history. We also plan to retain two
launches with ABL Space Systems, which was
originally slotted to carry our two prototype
satellites using its all-new RS1 rocket. This
diverse launch portfolio reduces risk associated
with launch vehicle stand-downs, and gives us
flexibility to use different rockets to address
different needs for the program.
To support our ambitious
deployment plan, Amazon and our partners are
investing in new production and launch
infrastructure in the U.S. and Europe. Many of those
projects are already underway: ULA is expanding
manufacturing facilities in Alabama, Northrup
Grumman is increasing production and adding capacity
in Utah for its solid rocket boosters, and Beyond
Gravity is building a second satellite dispenser
production facility in Linköping, Sweden.
More than 1,000 people work on
Project Kuiper, and the team is making considerable
progress as we prepare to serve tens of millions of
customers around the world. Stay tuned for updates
on our prototype mission later this year.
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