Amazon has expanded the space internet by launching 32 Amazon LEO satellites aboard an Ariane 6 rocket at 4:57 a.m. EDT Thursday.
As reported, the launch took place successfully from Europe’s spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, on the north-eastern coast of South America. AFP.
This historic launch is associated with the Amazon LEO project, formerly known as Project Kuiper. Under the project, the giant American company founded by billionaire Jeff Bezos sent the internet conglomerate into space with the goal of competing with the Starlink broadband mega constellation owned by Elon Musk.
Amazon LEO will eventually include about 3,200 satellites while Starlink leads the race with more than 10,000 spacecraft operated by it.
This was the second Ariane 6 launch, which was tasked with deploying 32 satellites for Project Kuiper, the low Earth orbit (LEO) internet constellation owned by Amazon.
The mission also represented the second flight of the Ariane 64 variant, the most powerful configuration of the rocket, featuring four solid rocket boosters.
According to the company’s plan, 3,200 satellites will be launched into space during more than 80 launches carried out by various rockets such as Ariane 6, SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and United Launch Alliance’s Atlas V and Vulcan Centaur.
So far, only 10 missions have been launched and the most recent mission occurred on April 27 when an Atlas V launched 29 Amazon LEO satellites into orbit.
Responsibility for the mission falls under the French company Arianespace. The company has been entrusted with the task of launching 18 for Amazon 18.
