In 2017, Iridium began launching Iridium NEXT, a second-generation worldwide network of telecommunications satellites, consisting of 66 active satellites, with another nine in-orbit spares and six on-ground spares. These satellites incorporate features such as data transmission that were not emphasized in the original design. One of the Iridium NEXT services is Iridium Certus, a globally available satellite broadband, which is capable of up to 704 kbit/s of bandwidth across maritime, aviation, land mobile, government, and
IoT applications. The NEXT satellites incorporate a secondary payload for
Aireon, a space-qualified
ADS-B data receiver for use by
air traffic control and, via
FlightAware, by airlines. A tertiary payload on 58 satellites is a marine
AIS ship-tracker receiver for Canadian company
ExactEarth Ltd. In January 2020, the Iridium constellation was certified for use in the
Global Maritime Distress and Safety System (GMDSS). The certification ended a monopoly on the provision of maritime distress services that had previously been held by
Inmarsat since the system became operational in 1999. Iridium NEXT also
provides data link to other satellites in space, enabling command and control of other space assets regardless of the position of ground stations and gateways.
Launch campaign In June 2010, Iridium signed the largest commercial rocket-launch deal ever at that time, a US$492 million contract with
SpaceX to launch 70 Iridium NEXT satellites on seven
Falcon 9 rockets from 2015 to 2017 via a
SpaceX leased launch facility at
Vandenberg Space Force Base. The final two satellites were originally slated to be orbited by a single launch of an
ISC Kosmotras Dnepr. Technical issues and consequential demands from Iridium's insurance delayed the launch of the first pair of Iridium NEXT satellites until April 2016. Iridium NEXT launch plans originally included launch of satellites on both
Ukrainian Dnepr launch vehicles and
SpaceX Falcon 9 launch vehicles, with the initial satellites launching on Dnepr in April 2016; however, in February 2016, Iridium announced a change. Due to an extended slowdown in obtaining the requisite launch licenses from Russian authorities, Iridium revamped the entire launch sequence for the 75-satellite constellation. It launched and successfully deployed 10 satellites with SpaceX on January 14, 2017, delayed due to weather from January 9, 2017, and the first of those new satellites took over the duties of an old satellite on March 11, 2017. At the time of the launch of the first batch, the second flight of ten satellites was planned to launch only three months later in April 2017. However, in a February 15 statement, Iridium said that SpaceX pushed back the launch of its second batch of Iridium NEXT satellites from mid-April to mid-June 2017. This second launch, which occurred on June 25, 2017, delivered another ten Iridium NEXT satellites to
low Earth orbit (LEO) on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. A third launch, which occurred on October 9, 2017, delivered another ten satellites to LEO, as planned. The Iridium NEXT IV mission launched with ten satellites on December 23, 2017. The fifth mission, Iridium NEXT V, launched with ten satellites on March 30, 2018. The sixth launch on May 22, 2018, sent another 5 satellites into LEO. The penultimate Iridium NEXT launch occurred on July 25, 2018, launching another 10 Iridium NEXT satellites. The final ten NEXT satellites launched on January 11, 2019. Of the six additional spare satellites five have been launched on 20 May 2023 while the last one, Iridium 101, is still on the ground. Iridium satellite number could change over time following failure and replacement. Iridium 127 had to be re-designated as Iridium 100 before launch due to a ground software issue. ==Defunct satellites== Over the years a number of Iridium satellites have ceased to work and are no longer in active service, some are partially functional and have remained in orbit whereas others have tumbled out of control or have
reentered the atmosphere. Iridium 21, 27, 20, 11, 46, 71, 44, 14, 79, 69 and 85 all suffered from issues before entering operational service soon after their launch. By 2018, of these eleven, Iridium 27, 79 and 85 have decayed out of orbit; Iridium 11, 14, 20 and 21 were renamed to Iridium 911, 914, 920 and 921 respectively since replacements of the same name were launched. From 2017, several first-generation Iridium satellites have been deliberately de-orbited after being replaced by operational Iridium NEXT satellites. This accidental collision was the first
hypervelocity collision between two
artificial satellites in
low Earth orbit. completing the move on March 4, 2009. ==Technical details==