Rocket Lab to Launch
Four PocketQube Satellites for Alba Orbital
August 18, 2021
Rocket Lab has signed a
rideshare agreement with Scottish / American
PocketQube satellite manufacturer, Alba Orbital,
to launch a cluster of small satellites designed
to demonstrate innovative radio and night-time
Earth observation technologies.
The four pico-satellites in
Alba Orbital’s cluster will fly as part of a
rideshare mission on Rocket Lab’s Electron
launch vehicle, lifting-off from Launch Complex
1 on New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula in Q4, 2021.
The cluster includes Alba Orbital’s own
Unicorn-2 PocketQube satellites, as well as the
TRSI-2, TRSI-3, and MyRadar-1 satellites for
Alba Orbital’s customers. Each small satellite
carries a unique sensor designed to demonstrate
innovative technologies on orbit.
Unicorn-2 will be carrying
an optical night-time imaging payload designed
to monitor light pollution across the globe.
Night-time satellite imagery, otherwise known as
‘Night Lights’ data, provides crucial insights
into human activities. This data enables a host
of applications such as tracking urbanization
and socioeconomic dynamics, evaluating conflict
and disasters, investigating fisheries,
assessing greenhouse gas emissions and energy
use, and analyzing light pollution and health
effects.
All four PocketQubes will
be deployed to a circular orbit by Electron’s
Kick Stage, a nimble spacecraft that provides
in-space propulsion and maneuvering capability
to ensure each satellite is deployed to a
precise and unique orbit defined by the
customer.
“We’re delighted to be Alba
Orbital’s mission partner once again,” said
Rocket Lab Founder and Chief Executive, Peter
Beck. “The Alba Orbital team have proven that
incredibly small satellites can be highly
capable and deliver tangible insights and
services back down to Earth at a fraction of
traditional satellite costs. Making it faster,
easier and more affordable to access space is a
mission we share, so we’re excited to make it
possible with Electron.”
“It’s a pleasure to be
working with Rocket Lab again on this exciting
mission,'' said Tom Walkinshaw, CEO and Founder
of Alba Orbital. “We successfully flew six
satellites on board Rocket Lab’s ‘Running Out of
Fingers’ flight in 2019, and we are thrilled to
launch the first of our imaging constellation
dedicated to imaging the Earth at night on board
the Electron rocket. From day one, Alba
Orbital’s mission has always been to democratize
access to space, and Rocket Lab has demonstrated
that they are whole-heartedly committed to the
same vision.”
The Alba cluster joins this
mission alongside AuroraSat-1 from Aurora
Propulsion Technologies, a Finnish company
dedicated to the sustainable use of space. The
mission is one of many scheduled to lift off on
Electron from Launch Complex 1 this year,
including three back-to-back dedicated launches
for BlackSky Global, and the CAPSTONE mission to
the Moon in support of NASA’s Artemis program.