After two delays, private US company SpaceX on Tuesday successfully launched its first commercial satellite, after repairs were made to the Falcon 9 rocket.
It roared into space at 2241 GMT from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, SpaceX said in a statement.
Its $100 million satellite was placed in orbit 14 minutes later, a SpaceX spokesman confirmed.
The rocket's cargo was a telecommunications satellite for the Luxembourg company SES, which until now has used European Ariane rockets or the Russian Proton for its satellite launches.
"Restart was good, apogee raised to 80k km (50k miles). Yes!!!," SpaceX owner Elon Musk, the billionaire Internet entrepreneur, said shortly after takeoff.
SES-8 is SpaceX's first launch to a geostationary transfer orbit -- 80,000 kilometers (50,000 miles) from Earth -- and most challenging mission to date, the company said earlier on Twitter.
The SES-8 satellite is due to provide television, cable TV and other services to countries including China, India and Vietnam.
SpaceX is eager to get into the commercial satellite launch business, estimated to be worth $190 billion a year.
The launch is the first using an improved version of the Falcon 9 after a test flight in California.
It roared into space at 2241 GMT from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, SpaceX said in a statement.
Its $100 million satellite was placed in orbit 14 minutes later, a SpaceX spokesman confirmed.
The rocket's cargo was a telecommunications satellite for the Luxembourg company SES, which until now has used European Ariane rockets or the Russian Proton for its satellite launches.
"Restart was good, apogee raised to 80k km (50k miles). Yes!!!," SpaceX owner Elon Musk, the billionaire Internet entrepreneur, said shortly after takeoff.
SES-8 is SpaceX's first launch to a geostationary transfer orbit -- 80,000 kilometers (50,000 miles) from Earth -- and most challenging mission to date, the company said earlier on Twitter.
The SES-8 satellite is due to provide television, cable TV and other services to countries including China, India and Vietnam.
SpaceX is eager to get into the commercial satellite launch business, estimated to be worth $190 billion a year.
The launch is the first using an improved version of the Falcon 9 after a test flight in California.
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