Catalonia's third nanosatellite launch delayed on Wednesday due to bad weather
Minairó will have to wait until at least next Friday before entering orbit
The launch of Catalonia's third nanosatellite has been delayed on Wednesday morning due to bad weather, according to American company SpaceX.
The device, which was due to take off from the Vandenberg space base in California, will have to wait at least until at least Friday, April 14.
The mission will travel aboard a Falcon 9 rocket launcher along with other satellites as part of a SpaceX aerospace journey.
Once in space, the nanosatellite will orbit Earth around 550 km into space at an approximate speed of 8 km/h and will pass over Catalonia approximately every five days.
The satellite has the aim of establishing a "laboratory in orbit" and improving 5G connectivity.
The device is named after a type of tiny elf, typical in myths and legends of the Pyrenees. The name Minairó was chosen by the young viewers of InfoK, a children's news programme from Catalan public broadcaster TV3.
Menut and Enxaneta
Catalonia's second nanosatellite was named Menut, which means small in Catalan, after almost 20,000 children voted on what it should be called.
The first nanosatellite, Enxaneta, was named after the daredevil children who climb to the top of human towers and raise their hands to the sky to signal the castell (castle) has been crowned.
Menut was launched to provide data for dealing with challenges such as energy or climate change while Enxaneta's main goal was to improve IoT (Internet of Things) connectivity.
The nanosatellites funded by the government also serve to "train up" a Catalan industry that seeks to compete at a global level, according to the director of the Catalan Institute of Space Studies, Ignasi Ribas, at the launch of Menut.
Find out more about Enxaneta and the Catalan Space Agency in this podcast from March 2021.