Watch Rocket Lab launch private Japanese Earth-observing satellite early on May 22
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
Rocket Lab will launch an Earth-observing radar satellite for the Japanese company Synspective on May 22. The Electron rocket will carry one of Synspective's Strix satellites, scheduled to lift off from New Zealand at 5:30 a.m. EDT. The mission, called "Viva La Strix," aims to provide data for urban development planning, construction, and disaster response. The Strix satellite can peer through cloud cover and observe Earth in all lighting conditions. This will be the ninth mission Rocket Lab flies for Synspective, with 18 more booked to deliver the rest of their constellation to orbit before 2030, totaling 78 launches for the Electron rocket.
💡 Why It Matters
- · Synthetic aperture radar technology enables constant Earth observation, regardless of weather or lighting conditions, making it a crucial tool for disaster response and urban planning.
- · Owl-inspired Strix satellites can provide vital data in near-real-time, leveraging their ability to see through clouds.