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Open Cosmos Launch Marks New Constellation Milestone

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Michael Johnson
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With confirmation from tracking teams, two company-built spacecraft are now in a round path about 1,050 kilometers high, following a clean deployment.

Open Cosmos and the Launch

Following a rapid cadence in regulatory progress, the firm unveiled the first nodes of its proprietary LEO telecom constellation, arriving barely a week after it locked in high-priority Ka-band access. To advance global connectivity and insight for users, the team is building this network to carry communications at scale.

Satellite Mission and Constellation Details

As the evening unfolded on the East Coast of the North Island, the Mahia Peninsula in New Zealand hosted Rocket Lab’s Electron, which lifted two satellites under the banner “The Cosmos Will See You Now.” Together, the two form the opening move toward a future‑ready constellation built to provide scalable, robust, and synchronized services across Europe and farther afield.

Launch Timeline and Orbit Verification

Keeping to the planned schedule, the team recorded ignition at 10:52 on 22 January (GMT) — 23:52 NZDT — and, as the launch progressed nominally, the program moved from factory throughput and constellation design to on‑orbit checkout at an altitude near 1,050 kilometers on a circular path.

Beyond the headline moment, the event demonstrates that the architecture, build flow, and operations concept are ready to fly — a clear signal of mission success — and it sets up a phased expansion of the wider network over the months ahead, marking a milestone for deployment readiness.

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