D-Orbit Launches ION’s First
Orbital Transportation Mission into a Mid
Inclination Orbit
The Starfield mission, launched
on January 31st, 2023, aboard SpaceX’s Starlink
mission, carries four payloads
Fino Mornasco, Italy, January
31st, 2023: Space logistics and orbital
transportation company D-Orbit launched Starfield,
the eighth commercial mission of their proprietary
orbital transfer vehicle (OTV) ION Satellite Carrier
(ION), and the first one in a mid[1]inclination
orbit.
The OTV lifted off today,
January 31st, 2023, at 8:15 a.m. PT (16:15 UTC)
aboard a Falcon 9 rocket from the Space Launch
Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force
Base in California, and was successfully deployed 57
minutes later into an approximately 340km altitude
and 70-degree inclination orbit.
ION is a versatile and
cost-effective OTV designed to precisely deploy
satellites and perform orbital demonstrations of
third-party payloads hosted onboard. After the first
commercial mission in September 2020, D-Orbit has
completed seven more missions, including one
featuring two IONs.
"A new year has just started,
and we have already launched two new missions and
three IONs", said Renato Panesi, PhD, D-Orbit's
co-founder and Chief Commercial Officer.
"I'm looking forward to facing
the challenges and celebrating the victories that
2023 will bring as we steadily move along our
roadmap, and I am proud to be part of the truly
remarkable team that is making the evolution of
space logistics possible".
Partnering with Valued
Customers
During the mission, ION SCV009,
dubbed “Eclectic Elena”, will host onboard four
third-party payloads:
• ADEO-N3, an autonomous
braking sail developed by Munich-based space company
HPS designed to help deorbit satellites in LEO (up
to 900 km) faster than with natural orbital decay.
ADEO can be used on satellites with flight altitudes
below 900 kilometers. D-Orbit has already performed
a successful deployment of ADEO’s smallest variant
in December 2022. The smallest version of the ADEO
family, ADEO-N3 weighs less than one kilogram, with
dimensions of only 10 x 10 x 10 centimeters (1U) and
a sail area of 5.0 square meters.
• NEA® Payload Release Ring
(PRR) by Ensign-Bickford Aerospace & Defense Company
(EBAD) for the deployment of payloads/spacecraft
from a launch vehicle or Orbital Transfer Vehicle
(OTV). Available in 8”, 15”, and 24” diameters, the
NEA® Payload Release Ring consists of four NEA®
release mechanisms, two ring halves, and separation
springs with corresponding holders. The ring will be
used to release a spacecraft simulator from ION.
• Bunny, an onboard computer
developed in-house by the students of the Spacecraft
Team of the Swiss Institute École Polytechnique
Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL).
This experiment is part of the
CHESS project, which aims at launching a
constellation of two CubeSats to analyze the Earth’s
atmosphere chemical composition and its evolution
over time and test a proof-of-concept for low-cost
probes to investigate extraterrestrial atmospheres
in future planetary missions.
• SD-1, a memorial payload by
StardustMe consisting of a batch of aluminum
machined capsules, each carrying a gram of human
cremated ashes, contained in an
additive-manufactured frame and enclosure. The
assembly, permanently fixed to D-Orbit Launches
ION’s First Orbital Transportation
Mission into a Mid-Inclination
Orbit
the main core of ION, will
eventually re-enter the atmosphere with the host
vehicle during decommissioning, providing an
ultimate form of space burial.
D-Orbit's mission control team
is now conducting the launch and early orbit phase
(LEOP) in preparation for the operational phase.
Starfield is ION’s second
mission in 2023. D-Orbit launched its first ION in
September 2020 aboard an Arianespace VEGA launcher,
then six further missions aboard SpaceX
Transporter missions. With this
launch, the Company will have transported to space
more than 90 payloads collectively.
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