Falcon 9 flight 20 (also known as Orbcomm OG2 M2)[1] was a Falcon 9 space launch that occurred on 22 December 2015 at 01:29:00 UTC (21 December, 8:29:00 pm local time). It was the first time that the first stage of an orbital rocket made a successful return and vertical landing.[2][3][4][5]
Prior to this flight, SpaceX's two previous attempts at a vertical landing and booster recovery ended in failure to recover the rocket.[6][7] The success of flight 20 marked a significant milestone en route to the company's goal of creating a reusable rocket system that would significantly reduce the cost of launching payloads into orbit.[8][9]
SES announced[10] in February 2015 that it would provide the payload on the first launch of the revised-design Falcon 9 Full Thrust (also called Falcon 9 v1.2 [11]). At the time, SES expected its SES-9 geostationary communications satellite would launch by September 2015.[12] SES kept the decision despite the loss of the launch vehicle and payload of another SpaceX mission in June 2015, but postponed the launch until late 2015.[13]
On 16 October 2015, after considering all options, SpaceX announced a change: Orbcomm's 11 OG2 satellites would be the payload on the return-to-flight launch of the redesigned Falcon 9 instead of SES-9.[12] The Orbcomm payload with its lower orbit would allow SpaceX to test relighting the second-stage engine, a capability required to successfully put the heavier SES-9 on a geostationary orbit.[12] The launch was delayed to mid-December or later, while SES-9 was scheduled to follow within a few weeks.[12]
A required pre-launch static-fire test was initially scheduled for 16 December 2015, but a few issues emerged with the new processes required for the colder propellants for the launch vehicle and the related ground support equipment. The test was successfully carried out on 18 December 2015, which resulted in a launch delay of one day to 19 December 2015 (local time).[14] The launch was subsequently delayed an additional day after statistical analysis indicated a somewhat higher probability of recovering the booster on the later date.[15]
New launch vehicle
First stage of Falcon 9 flight 20 landing on a ground pad in December 2015
The Falcon 9 Full Thrust launch vehicle used on flight 20 had a number of significant modifications from the previous Falcon 9 v1.1 vehicle. These included:[13]
increased second stage tank length and propellant volume
upgraded structure in the landing legs, also to support the reusable development program and objectives
upgraded first stage structure and octaweb engine support structure
denser liquid oxygen and RP-1 propellants through the use of subcooling, refrigeration below the typical temperature of previous Falcon 9 launch conditions.
first stage booster can reach low Earth orbit as a single stage if not carrying the upper stage and a heavy satellite.[16]
Launch and on-orbit test
Long-exposure of launch (left) and landing (right) during the flight.
Flight 20 was launched on 22 December 2015 at 01:29 UTC (21 December, 8:29 pm local time).
Second stage re-ignition
Following successful launch and deployment of the OG2 satellites, the Merlin Vacuum (1D) second-stage engine successfully re-ignited, demonstrating its capability to launch SES-9 into geostationary transfer orbit. The engine burn de-orbited the second stage as planned for a destructive re-entry, preventing it from becoming space debris.[17]
Payload
Falcon 9 Flight 20 carried 11 Orbcomm-OG2 second-generation satellites,[12] which will provide enhanced ORBCOMM messaging capabilities, increased data capacity, and automatic identification systems (AIS) service.[18] All 11 satellites were successfully deployed by the Falcon 9 second stage, beginning approximately 14 minutes after takeoff. All 11 satellites successfully checked in with ground control stations.[2]
The satellites were placed by the launch vehicle "within a fraction of a degree in inclination and 5km (3.1mi) in altitude of the intended orbit, "and by 9 January 2016, were in the middle of on-orbit testing, while executing propulsion maneuvers that had spread the 11 satellites over a 6,400km (4,000mi) orbital arc.[19] Initial ORBCOMM customer message traffic began to be tested by late January 2016.[20]
Satflare reported in February 2016 that one of the 11 flight 2 satellites will reenter Earth's atmosphere in late-February 2016.[21]
The satellite manufacturer, Sierra Nevada Corporation, completed checkout work and handed all 11 satellites off to ORBCOMM in early March 2016.[22][23]
SpaceX performed a controlled-descent test on the rocket's first stage — the eighth propulsive return test of the series. For the first time, SpaceX was able to vertically land and successfully recover the first stage.[24] Earlier tests had proven the high-altitude deceleration and atmospheric re-entry portions of the test protocol, but no landing attempt had previously been successful, including two attempts earlier in 2015 to land a first stage on a floating landing platform.[25] The entire controlled-descent through the atmosphere and landing attempt is an arrangement that is unusual for other launch vehicles.[26]
The flight test was planned for the twentieth Falcon 9 launch, even after the manifested payload was switched from SES-9 to the 11-satellite Orbcomm OG-2 payload.[27] The test was scheduled for and successfully carried out on 21 December 2015, when the first stage landed intact at Landing Zone 1.[3][25]
SpaceX decided not to fly the B1019 again.[28] Rather, the rocket was moved a few miles north to Launch Pad 39A, recently refurbished by SpaceX at the adjacent Kennedy Space Center, to conduct a static fire test. This test aimed to assess the health of the recovered booster and the capability of this rocket design to fly repeatedly in the future.[29][25] The historic booster was eventually displayed outside SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California.
Evaluation of the recovered first stage
Falcon 9 used first stage engine
On 31 December 2015, SpaceX announced that no damage had been found on the stage and that it was ready to perform a static fire again.[30][31] SpaceX had initially moved the booster to their hangar at LC-39A, but they moved the stage to SLC-40 — the pad from which it was launched — on 12 January 2016.[32] On 15 January 2016, SpaceX conducted the static fire test on the recovered booster, obtaining good overall results except for one of the outer engines experiencing thrust fluctuations.[29] Elon Musk reported that this may have been due to debris ingestion.[33][34]
In February 2016, SpaceX President and COOGwynne Shotwell indicated that some unspecified modifications to the stage design would occur as a result of the booster's post-flight evaluation and static fire.[35]
SpaceX live coverage of the launch and landing included cheering crowds and tours of the SpaceX manufacturing and launch facilities.[37]The Atlantic technology editor Robinson Meyer called the scripted broadcast "a way of treating a rocket launch not like a dry engineering procedure, but like some combination of the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade and the Super Bowl".[37] Upon the unprecedented first stage landing, a SpaceX engineer announced "The Falcon has landed",[38][39] reminding audiences of the first Apollo landing.
↑"OG2 Update: Satellite Successfully Processes Customer Message Traffic". 28 January 2016. Archived from the original on 4 February 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2016. In-orbit testing continues to progress well. Yesterday, we turned on one of our OG2 satellites and started successfully processing customer message traffic. We will continue testing this single satellite for the next several days. We expect to move forward with multi-satellite testing next week.
↑"ONLINE SATELLITE AND FLARE TRACKING". Satflare. 24 February 2015. Archived from the original on 24 February 2016. Retrieved 24 February 2016. WARNING: This object is expected to decay around Thursday, 25/02/2016 UTC
↑"SpaceX ORBCOMM-2 Mission"(PDF). SpaceX. 21 December 2015. Archived from the original(PDF) on 23 December 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2015. This mission also marks SpaceX's return-to-flight as well as its first attempt to land a first stage on land. The landing of the first stage is a secondary test objective.
↑Foust, Jeff (4 February 2014). "SpaceX seeks to accelerate Falcon 9 production and launch rates this year". SpaceNews. Retrieved 6 February 2016. The latest changes, [Shotwell] said, came after a static fire test of the first stage January 15 at Cape Canaveral. "We fired it up, and actually learned something about the rocket", she said, without elaborating on what the company learned. "We're going to make some mods based on what we saw on that stage landing and firing".
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ). Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).