Spire Global to Launch Six
Satellites on SpaceX Transporter-6 Mission
December 14, 2022
Spire Global, Inc. will launch
six satellites on the SpaceX Transporter-6 mission
from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station no earlier
than January 2023. The satellites will demonstrate
advancements and new capabilities for Spire’s
weather and aviation solutions.
Spire will launch two
demonstration satellites carrying next-generation
Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B)
payloads, which collect aircraft position data. The
satellites will expand Spire’s existing ADS-B
constellation and play an integral role in improving
coverage and latency for the Company’s aviation
products. They will demonstrate sophisticated
technology for global aircraft tracking, including
an advanced antenna design based on years of
in-orbit ADS-B payload experience and
state-of-the-art inter-satellite links. The
satellites will be Spire’s first to have propulsion
systems on board. The multipurpose satellites will
also carry payloads to monitor Automatic
Identification System (AIS) signals for vessel
tracking data and for Space Services customer
Myriota, a provider of global Internet of Things
(IoT) service from satellites.
One of the satellites on the
launch will fly a polarimetric radio occultation
(PRO) payload that collects data on precipitation
profiles and patterns. The mission will validate PRO
sensitivity to precipitation using several global
navigation satellite systems as signals of
opportunity. This will be the first step towards the
assimilation of PRO data into weather models, which
will enhance the value and accuracy of global
weather forecasts along with the weather variables
currently gathered by Spire’s constellation. The PRO
payload, which will be the first launched by a
private company, was designed as part of the ESA
InCubed Programme, a co-funding program focused on
developing innovative and commercially viable
products and services that generate or exploit the
value of Earth observation imagery and dataset. This
activity is supported by the Luxembourg Space Agency
(LSA). Spire is the largest producer of radio
occultation data, which is leveraged by government
agencies like NOAA, NASA, ECMWF, and EUMETSAT to
drive global weather predictions.
“We at ESA are very happy with
the efficiency, focus, and speed of implementation
of this activity, and if we can see it resulting in
measurement data and processing results for
systematic evaluation of their assimilation into
numerical weather prediction, that will be a
rewarding completion,” said Thomas Burger, ESA
Technical Officer for Spire.
“Satellites and payloads are
continuing to get smaller and more powerful,” said
Jeroen Cappaert, Spire CTO and Co-founder. “We’re
capitalizing on this rapid pace of innovation and
miniaturization to continue to enhance our
constellation with cutting-edge technology that
drives new applications of satellite data. The
applications we’re demonstrating for aviation
tracking and precipitation data will play a crucial
role in solving some of the greatest challenges we
face on Earth, such as overcoming climate change
with more accurate weather forecasting and bringing
transparency to the supply chain.”
The Company is also launching
three satellites to replenish its fully deployed
constellation of more than 100 multipurpose
satellites. Spire designs and builds its satellites
entirely in house at its manufacturing facility in
Glasgow. The Company has built and launched more
than 150 satellites, carrying over 500 years of
spaceflight heritage across its fleet.
The satellites are manifested
on the mission through a multi-launch agreement
between Spire and Exolaunch, which includes access
to the Transporter missions through Exolaunch’s
long-term launch arrangements with SpaceX.
Exolaunch, a global provider of launch, in-space
logistics and deployment services, will also provide
Spire with deployment and integration services.
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