Pacific Spaceport Complex – Alaska

[1] In mid-2016, the Alaska Aerospace Corporation "signed a multi-year contract with the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) for multiple launches from the PSCA through 2021".[1] Another private company, Eclipse Orbital, was working with the Alaska Aerospace Corporation to prepare for flight operations of their "Corona" launch vehicle in 2020.Indian private space company Agnikul Cosmos signed a memorandum of agreement with Alaska Aerospace Corporation to test launch their Agnibaan rocket from the Pacific Spaceport Complex.[10] The Kodiak spaceport has two launch pads with a mission control center that includes 64 workstations with high-speed communications and data links.There is a clean room for preparing satellites for launch, a fully enclosed 17-story-tall rocket assembly building and two independent range and telemetry systems.
Kodiak IslandGovernment of AlaskaAthena IMinotaur IVAstra RocketRocket 3.0Rocket 3.3Rocket 3United States space programU.S. Space ForceMercuryGeminiApolloSkylabSpace ShuttleShuttle–MirInternational Space StationCommercial CrewConstellationArtemisLunar GatewayExplorersLarge StrategicLunar OrbiterLunar PrecursorMarinerMars ExplorationNew MillenniumPioneerPlanetary MissionsDiscoveryNew FrontiersPlanetary ObserverRangerSurveyorVanguardVikingVoyagerNASA Astronaut CorpsEastern RangeCape Canaveral Space Force StationKennedy Space CenterWallops Flight FacilityMid-Atlantic Regional SpaceportWestern RangeVandenberg Space Force BaseAntaresAtlas VElectronFalcon 9Falcon HeavyLauncherOneMinotaurNew GlennNew ShepardPegasusSpace Launch SystemStarshipVulcan CentaurUnited States Space ForceNational Reconnaissance OfficeUnited States Space CommandDepartment of Energy national laboratoriesFederal Aviation AdministrationOffice of Commercial Space TransportationNational Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationNational Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information ServiceOffice of Space CommerceSpace Weather Prediction CenterDepartment of State Office of Space AffairsOffice of Science and Technology PolicyBall AerospaceBigelow AerospaceBlue OriginBoeingFirefly AerospaceLockheed MartinRaytheonRocket LabNorthrop GrummanSierra Nevada CorporationSpaceXUnited Launch AllianceVirgin GalacticVirgin Orbitspaceportsub-orbitalorbitallaunch vehiclesU.S. governmentBill WalkerMissile Defense Agencyflight testsTerminal High Altitude Area DefenseprivateVector Space SystemsIndianAgnibaansatellitesSpace Test ProgramAerojetHerculesU.S. Air ForceGlobal Positioning SystemLangmuir probeCastor 4BStarshine 3SAPPHIREPicoSATPolaris A-3KwajaleinVandenberg Air Force BaseFASTRAC-AFASTRAC-BFalconSat-5FASTSATO/OREOSNanoSail-D2STP-S26TacSat-4Advanced Hypersonic Weaponrange safetyArrow IIIIsraeli Air ForceSpaceBEENASASpaceFlight.comAviation WeekAlaska Dispatch NewsJuneau Empirepublic domainThe AgeSan Francisco ChronicleNASASpaceFlightSpaceportsJiuquanTaiyuanWenchangXichangWenchang CommercialSatish DhawanThumbaPameungpeukSemnanShahroud Space CenterPalmachimTanegashimaUchinouraSpace OneRoscosmosBaikonurSary ShaganSUPARCOSonmianiVostochnyAndøyaSvalRakKapustin YarPlesetskEl ArenosilloEsrangeSaxaVord SpaceportCape Canaveral SFSVandenberg SFBKennedyWallopsPoker FlatCorn RanchMojaveSpaceport AmericaSpaceX StarbaseWoomeraSouthern LaunchKoonibbaMahia PeninsulaReagan Test SiteAlcântaraBarreira do InfernoGuiana / KourouInternational watersSea LaunchKulasekharapatnamHokkaidoSpaceport SwedenSutherland spaceportClinton-ShermanColoradoEllingtonMidlandEl HierroRegganeChurchillHall BeachResolute BayGuangdeBliznaGreifswalder OiePeenemündeTuchola ForestBalasoreSalto di QuirraNii-jimaObachiBroglio, MalindiTonghaeKheysaOkhotskSvobodnyKronogård