Tuesday, February 20, 2024

SpaceX - HTS-113 BT Merah Putih 2

Screenshot from the launch Webcast of HTS-113 BT. Got new sunscreen and sunglasses. I’m ready

Mission Rundown: SpaceX Falcon 9 - HTS-113 BT

Written: February 21, 2024

Lift Off Time

February 20, 2024 – 20:11:00 EST | 15:11:00 UTC

Mission Name

HTS-113 BT – ‘Merah Putih 2’

Launch Provider

SpaceX

Customers

PT Telkom Satelit Indonesia – Telkomsat

Rocket

Falcon 9 Block 5 serial number B1067-17

Launch Location

Space Launch Complex 40 - SLC-40

Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida

Payload

4000 B2 Thales Alenia Spacebus communication satellite

Payload mass

4 000 kg ~ 8 818 pounds

Where did the satellite go?

Geostationary Transfer Orbit 250 km - 36 000 km x 28,59°

Recovery of the first stage?

JRTI was towed downrange by Tug Signet Warhorse III

Where will the first stage land?

Just Read The Instructions was waiting 650 km downrange

Recovery of the fairings?

Yes - Recovery ship Bob is 790 km downrange

Are these fairings new?

No - Old pair Type 3.2 with 4x2 venting ports, thermal steel tip, lowered protrusion and acoustic tiles

This will be the:

300th successful SpaceX mission

CRS-7 exploded mid-flight and Amos-6 never left the pad and wasn’t counted

– 301st flight of all Falcon 9 rockets

– 233rd re-flight of all Falcon 9 boosters

– 245th flight of a Falcon 9 Block 5 rocket

– 219th re-flight of Falcon 9 Block 5 boosters

– 168th SpaceX launch from SLC-40 

– 275th booster landing overall

– 16th mission for SpaceX in 2024

Where to watch

Where to read more

NASASpaceFlight link – X Twitter link

Want to know or learn more go visit or see Tim Dodd


Launch debriefing

(This did happen)

Falcon 9 at Mach One on about T+00:01:00

Seen from ground it’s clear that signal from rocket is 3-4 second delayed

2nd stage went into a 233x350 km orbit

Jumps in telemetry is acquisition/loss of signal from rocket

T-00:11:09

Host:

T 00:00:00

T+00:01:10

T+00:02:33

T+00:02:37

T+00:02:45

T+00:03:33

T+00:04:28

T+00:06:20

T+00:08:11

T+00:08:14

T+00:27:07

T+00:28:04

-

T+00:34:01

T+00:34:32

T+00:35:12

T+00:56:47

T+05:56:47

Space Devs high definition video at 00:55 – link

Somya Srivastava from Hawthorne Mezzanine Studio

Liftoff at 12:05 - 15:11:00 UTC - Audio delay

MaxQ at 13:15 - Maximum aerodynamic pressure

MECO 14:38 - B1067-17 is empty after 213 seconds

Stage separation 14:41 - Just losing 90% weight

SES-1 at 14:50 - Green TEA-TAB ignition visible

Fairing separation at 15:38 - Acoustic tiles visible

1st stage apogee at 16:33 - 7 395 km/h at 119 km

Reentry burn 18:25 by 3 Merlin 1D# for 26 seconds

SECO at 20:16 and coasting in a elliptical orbit

Landing burn 20:19 by 1 Merlin 1D# for 24 seconds

SpaceX resumes audio feed at 39:12

SES-2 and SECO-2 in 67 seconds at 40:09 gave a velocity boost from 26 491 km/h to 35 692 km/h

SpaceX resumes audio feed at 46:06

Deployment of Merah Putih 2 shown at 46:36

Wrap up from Hawthorne Mezzanine Studio at 47:17

Deorbit burn/blowout over the Indian Ocean

2nd stage does a 44g reentry dive in the Pacific Ocean



Second time we left here

SpaceX is launching a Falcon 9 with the HTS-113 BT mission aka. the Telkomsat Merah Putih 2 satellite to a geosynchronous transfer orbit.

Lift Off took place on Tuesday, February 20, 2024 at 15:11 EST - 20:11 UTC from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

NGA of Merah Putih 2 flight path due east from SLC-40 with both JRTI and fairing recovery areas

The Falcon 9 rocket will be composed of booster B1067-17, the 311th second stage and old reused fairings containing the mission satellite weighing in at 4000 Kg.

B1067-17 will have made its seventeenth flight after launching its next mission:

CRS-22

June 3, 2021

Starlink Grp 5-5

March 24, 2023

CREW-3

November 11, 2021

Starlink Grp 5-9

May 14, 2023

Türksat 5B

December 19, 2021

Satria-1

June 18, 2023

Crew-4

April 27, 2022

Starlink Grp 6-10

August 16/17, 2023

CRS-25

July 21, 2022

Starlink Grp 6-22

October 13, 2023

Starlink Grp 4-34

Sept. 18/19, 2022

Starlink Grp 6-29

Nov. 21/22, 2023

Hotbird 13G

November 3, 2022

Starlink Grp 6-35

January 7, 2024

O3b mPOWER

December 16, 2022

Merah Putih 2

February 20, 2024

Starlink Grp 5-2

January 26, 2023

Next mission TBD

Month Day, 2024

After separating from the second stage, the booster B1067-17 will land on the Autonomous Spaceport Drone Ship - Just Read The Instruction.

After refurbishment of the booster, it will be designated as B1067-18. The second stage will after payload deployment be deorbited in the South - North Indian/Pacific Ocean south of Cape Town - Australia - east of Hawaii a couple of hours after the launch.

The Falcon 9 didn’t perform a static fire test of the engines. This has been omitted many times due to Falcon 9’s increasing reliability. Only after engine swabs and issues with the importance of the payload does a static fire test become necessary.

The old fairings are launched with no known previous missions. (Nobody is keeping count of their flight numbers). Bob will recover them 490 km downrange.

The Merah Putih 2 payload

Designed, built, and operated by Thales Alenia Space for the state-owned PT Telkom Satelit Indonesia, or TelkomSat, this new broadband communications satellite will strengthen the telecommunications structure across the archipelago.

Operating in the Ku- and C-bands, this high-throughout communication satellite is built upon the Spacebus-4000B2 platform and will provide over 32 billion bits per second (Gbps) capacity from its 113 degrees east position in geostationary orbit.

The satellite, also known as “Merah Putih 2”, left Thales Alenia Space’s clean rooms in Cannes, France, late last year and was shipped to the Cape from Nice, arriving at Port Canaveral in late January to then make a final trip to the integration facility.

Thales Alenia Space will be delivering in-orbit support throughout the satellite’s expected 15-year lifecycle, as well as providing the ground control segment and on-site training and support for the customer’s engineering team.

The rocket launch

A typical Falcon 9 mission begins with the countdown that has a traditional 35-minute long propellant load sequence which begins with RP-1 (a refined form of kerosene) loading on both stages and liquid oxygen (LOX) loading on the first stage only.

Loading of RP-1 on the second stage wraps up first at the T-20 minute mark followed by the usual “T-20 minute vent” as the oxygen purging begins on the pipelines of the Falcon 9 Transporter/Erector (T/E) that supplies fluids and power to the vehicle. LOX load on the second stage begins about four minutes after that at T-16 minutes.

Engine chill commences at the T-7 minute mark with a small flow of LOX going into the turbopumps on all nine Merlin engines on the first stage. RP-1 loading on the booster then wraps up about a minute later at the T-6 minute mark.

LOX load on the first and second stages ends at around the T-3 minute and T-2 minute mark respectively, and the rocket takes control of the countdown at the T-1 minute mark.

Engine ignition is commanded at T-3 seconds allowing them to achieve maximum thrust and pass final checks before committing to launch and if engine checks look correct, the ground clamps release the rocket for liftoff at the expected T0 time.

After liftoff, Falcon 9 climbs away from the launch site, pitching downrange as it maneuvers along its pre-programmed trajectory. Approximately 72 seconds into the flight, the vehicle passes through Max-Q — the point of maximum dynamic pressure, where mechanical stresses on the rocket are the greatest.

The nine first-stage engines continue to power Falcon 9 for the first two minutes and 30 seconds of the mission, until the time of main engine cutoff (MECO), at which point all nine engines shut down nearly simultaneously.

Stage separation normally occurs 3-4 seconds later, with the ignition of the second stage’s Merlin Vacuum engine coming about seven seconds after staging.

While the second stage continues onward to orbit with its payload, the first stage coasts upward to apogee — the highest point of its trajectory — before beginning its trip back to Earth. The booster refines its course toward the landing zone before attempting to softly touch down on the deck of one of SpaceX’s three drone ships.

Two or three burns are required to secure the safe return and landing of a Falcon 9 booster depending on the chosen landing site. A boost back burn nullifies the horizontal speed from about 7000 km/h plus to a 1000 km/h negative if a return to launch site is chosen.

Normally a free fall trajectory is chosen which requires a re-entry burn designed to break the speed into the denser atmosphere. The Merlin 1D# engines start in a 1-3-1 sequence with the center engine 9 starting 4 seconds before lighting up engine 1 and 5 in a burn lasting 14-16 seconds ending with a 2 second center engine solo burn.

The re-entry burn last 20-22 seconds and the booster is now falling and steering through the denser atmosphere with the 6x8 feet grid fins. A last landing burn performed by the Merlin 1D# center engine is timed to the last millisecond securing the aiming and breaking of the boosters speed. Booster landings have been performed over 270 times.

Using a drone ship for booster recovery allows SpaceX to launch more mass in a payload on Falcon 9 than it would be able to launch on a return-to-launch-site mission.

In the meantime, the second stage carries on with the primary mission. After stage separation and Merlin Vacuum engine ignition, the payload fairing halves are jettisoned, thereby exposing the satellites to space.

Much akin to the Falcon 9 first stage, the fairing halves can be recovered and reused, using a system of thrusters and parachutes to make a controlled descent into the ocean where they will be picked up by a recovery vessel.

Second-stage engine cutoff (SECO-1) takes place just over eight and a half minutes into the flight. Other engine burns to modify or increase the deployment orbit will follow if the mission requires it, such as on this commercial mission which used a second burn before deploying the Merah Putih 2 satellite.

The Merah Putih 2 satellite are deployed into a geostationary transfer orbit. The satellite will raise itself into a more stable orbit, where it will undergo checkouts before heading into its final operational orbit.

After spacecraft separation, the second stage will, if it’s still in low earth orbit, perform a deorbit burn for proper disposal, ensuring that reentry takes place in the south Pacific or Indian Ocean. Second stages in high geostationary transfer or geostationary insertion orbits - GTO and GEO - will become one of now 35 pieces of derelict space debris.

When the second stage comes in contact with ground control station in either Hawthorne, California or Boca Chica, Texas after one orbit. The deorbit burn and a blow out command is given simultaneously to brake and empty the propellant tanks. 40-45 minutes later the second stage re-enters and crashes into the Ocean.

The rocket vehicle

The Falcon 9 Block 5 is SpaceX’s partially reusable two-stage medium-lift launch vehicle. The vehicle consists of a reusable first stage, an expendable second stage, and, when in payload configuration, a pair of reusable fairing halves.

The Falcon 9 first stage contains 9 Merlin 1D# sea level engines. Each engine uses an open gas generator cycle and runs on RP-1 and liquid oxygen (LOx). Each engine produces 845 kN of thrust at sea level, with a specific impulse (ISP) of 285 seconds, and 934 kN in a vacuum with an ISP of 313 seconds.

Due to the powerful nature of the engine, and the large amount of them, the Falcon 9 first stage is able to lose an engine right off the pad, or up to two later in flight, and be able to successfully place the payload into orbit.

The Merlin engines are ignited by triethylaluminum and triethylborane (TEA-TEB), which instantaneously burst into flames when mixed in the presence of oxygen. During static fire and launch the TEA-TEB is provided by the ground service equipment. However, as the Falcon 9 first stage is able to propulsively land, three of the Merlin engines (E1, E5, and E9) contain TEA-TEB canisters to relight for the boost back, reentry, and landing burns.

The Falcon 9 second stage is the only expendable part of the Falcon 9. It contains a singular MVacD engine that produces 992 kN of thrust and an ISP of 348 seconds. The Falcon 9 can put some or many payloads in different orbits on missions with many burns and/or long coasts between burns, the second stage is able to be equipped with a mission extension package.

When the second stage has this mission extension package it has a gray strip, which helps keep the RP-1 warm in sunlight, an increased number of composite-overwrapped pressure vessels (COPVs) for pressurization control, and additional TEA-TEB.

SpaceX is the first entity ever that recovers and reflies its fairings. After being jettisoned, the two fairing halves will use cold gas thrusters to orientate themselves as they descend through the atmosphere. Once at a lower altitude, they will deploy drogue chutes and parafoils to help them glide down to a soft landing for recovery.

The Falcon 9’s fairing consists of two dissimilar reusable halves. The first half (the half that faces away from the transport erector) is called the active half, and houses the pneumatics for the separation system. The other fairing half is called the passive half.

Comparison of Type 1 and 2 with measurements based on pixels - Type 2 are 5-6 inches thicker

As the name implies, this half plays a purely passive role in the fairing separation process, as it relies on the pneumatics from the active half.

SpaceX used boats with giant suspended nets to attempt to catch the fairing halves, however, at the end of 2020 this program was canceled due to safety risks and a low success rate. SpaceX will attempt to recover the fairing halves from the water with one of the three recovery vessels Go Beyond, Bob or Doug.

There are three known types of 34 x 17 foot fairings used by SpaceX to protect payload during ascent through the atmosphere. The first type had 10 evenly spaced ventilation ports in a circle on the bottom part of the fairings. This type was not aerodynamic enough to carry a parachute and ACS - Attitude Control System.

The aerodynamic balance during descent must have made them prone to stalling, or they burned up too easily. ACS gas tanks, flight orientation computers and ACS thrusters must have helped with these problems during development of type 2 fairings.

The second type is a slightly thicker fairing with only 8 evenly spaced ventilation ports in a circle on the bottom part of the fairings. The ventilation ports release the pressurized Nitrox gas during ascent, but let seawater in which makes it harder to refurbish the fairings after recovery from the ocean.

In 2021, SpaceX started flying a new “upgraded” version of the Falcon 9 fairing. The third type has 8 ventilation ports in pair’s near the edge of the fairings.

Some old type 2 fairings have been rebuilt and reused in Starlink launches. That have been a test program to develop the type 3 fairings to prevent saltwater from the ocean from flooding and sinking the fairing, and makes refurbishment toward the next flight easier.

Lately it’s apparent that the fairings are actively aiming for the droneship in order to speed up the recovery process and cut corners of the time table. The fairings are breaking their speed during reentry and before deploying the parachute at altitude or the last moment.

Another solution is a ‘vertical’ boost lifting the fairings apogee so the ballistic trajectory is changed aiming for a landing nearer the droneship. It’s equivalent to raising the angle on a water hose giving the water stream an higher arc but giving it a shorter reach.

It’s not clear whether or not the cold gas nitrogen thrusters alone are capable of doing a ‘boost back’ or a ‘push up’ so the fairings can alter their forward momentum mid-flight. Every landing within 50 km of the ASDS seems to be an aimed fairing landing.

SpaceX won’t be utilizing this ‘push up’ fairing recovery program, which seems not to be in use anymore due to the danger of a wayward fairing half landing to close.

Everyday Astronaut: Claire Percival link

NasaSpaceFlight: Martin Smith link

Coauthor/Text Retriever: Johnny Nielsen

SpaceX Launch List  - ElonX stats link


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