Rocket Lab launches tailor -made solar panels for subsequent gene satellite missions
USA, Inc. (Nasdaq: RKLB) has unveiled a new series of adaptable solar panels, branded as Starray, aimed at tackling the wide spectrum of satellite force requirements in all orbital environments. The official debut took place during the 40th Space symposium in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Starray systems are designed for adaptability and supply power outputs ranging from around 100 watts to more than 2,000 watts. This is achieved by modular configurations of a maximum of four panels per wing and the best performing radiation from the rocket lab laboratory hardened four-fold junction solar cells. The design offers customers a plug-and-play option that balances rapid implementation, mission-specific coordination and cost efficiency without extensive redesign.
Rocket Lab is uniquely positioned with the only fully vertically integrated production line of the industry in the Sun production line. The company manages every phase of the process in -house, from the manufacture of solar cells and CICs (cell interconnect coverage) to compiling complete panels and integrated arrays.
“Our goal is to offer the industrial mission-specific adjustment with short lead times and lower costs,” says Brad Clevenger, vice-president of room systems at Rocket Lab. “Customers can choose from a series of pre-developed configurations for solar array to meet the needs of their application and at the same time make use of the reliability, performance and speed of the vertical integrated production of Rocket Lab.”
The heritage of Rocket Lab in solar technology comprises more than two decades, after supporting a wide range of high -profile missions. These include contributions to national security platforms, deep space -scientific companies such as the James Webb Space Telescope, NASA’s Artemis Lunar initiatives and Mars discharge travelers such as ingenuity and the Insight Lander. Commercially, the Arrays of Rocket Lab also feed more than 1,100 satellites in a job around the earth, in particular the Gen1 -constellation of Oneweb, which delivers broadband internet from Lage Earth’s job.