Hawkeye 360 Successfully
Launches Cluster 6 Satellites Aboard Inaugural
Rocket Lab Electron Flight From Virginia
anuary 24, 2023
HawkEye 360 Inc. announced that
its Cluster 6 next-generation satellites have
successfully deployed to orbit aboard the inaugural
Rocket Lab Electron flight from Launch Complex 2 at
Virginia Space’s Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport
within NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility. Communication
with the satellites has been established by the
company’s operations team. This is the first of
three dedicated Rocket Lab USA Inc. (Nasdaq: RKLB)
flights contracted by HawkEye 360.
“We are happy to report that
our Cluster 6 next-generation satellites have
reached orbit and we look forward to ramping up
operations in the weeks ahead and fully integrating
them into our constellation,” said HawkEye 360 CEO,
John Serafini. “We are grateful for our valued
mission partners, Rocket Lab and the Virginia
Commercial Space Flight Authority, who worked
alongside our fantastic HawkEye 360 team to make
this inaugural Virginia launch a success.”
“We’re immensely proud to have
delivered mission success for HawkEye 360,” said
Rocket Lab founder and CEO Peter Beck. “With Launch
Complex 2, we set out to create a new path to orbit
from U.S. soil after more than 30 Electron launches
from New Zealand, and what could be more fitting for
the first Virginia mission than launching a
Virginia-built satellite? We couldn’t ask for better
mission partners in HawkEye 360 and Virginia Space,
and we look forward to many more missions together.”
“It is an honor for Virginia
Space to partner with HawkEye 360, a Virginia-based
company, and launch such an important payload into
orbit from our Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport,”
said Virginia Commercial Space Flight Authority CEO
and Executive Director Roosevelt “Ted” Mercer, Jr.
“Collaboration across different sectors of the space
industry is key to ensure access to space for our
nation. This is a historic moment for the
Commonwealth of Virginia, and we look forward to
future launches with Hawkeye 360 and Rocket Lab.”
The Cluster 6 trio of
satellites will be the first in the HawkEye
constellation to enter an inclined orbit, boosting
revisit rates over the mid-latitude regions of the
globe. Once Cluster 6 achieves initial operating
capability, HawkEye 360 will be able to collect RF
data as frequently as once per hour anywhere on
Earth, enabling the company to offer the most timely
and actionable RF data and data analytics available
on the market.
This successful launch expands
HawkEye 360’s constellation to 18 satellites with
expanded and improved data collection in the 15 -18
GHz range, exposing new and meaningful insights for
customers. These second-generation Cluster 6
satellites hold two payloads for system redundancy
and are each equipped to collect VHF, UHF, X-Band,
L-Band, S-Band, X-Band, and GPS Interference
signals.