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For major rocketry, other than SpaceX, by a considerable margin, yes.



Not really a huge margin, Roskosmos launched 2 on February 14, 1989, from the same launch site.

Edit: Also just read that on the same day, the first GPS satellites were also launched from the US.


I guess 3 instead of 2 would be a 50% increase, which could be counted as a "huge margin".


It's also the smallest possible margin ;)


In 1966 NASA launched two rockets to LEO as part of the Gemini 12 mission - under 2 hours apart (Gemini, Athena docking target.)

As for SpaceX, just a few months ago the Psyche asteroid mission and a Starlink launch also happened the same day.


Depends on what you call “major”. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-2_rocket#Operational_history:

“From a field near the village of Serooskerke, five V-2s were launched on 15 and 16 September, with one more successful and one failed launch on the 18th“

That must mean they launched at least 3 on either the 15th or the 16th.

That page also says “Beginning in September 1944, more than 3,000 V-2s were launched” and “The final two rockets exploded on 27 March 1945”, so that’s over 3,000 in at most 208 days, so there must have been days there were at least 14 “launches in a single day by the same entity”. I suspect the actual top number is a lot higher.

If you think that’s borderline “a single entity”, there’s “After the US Army captured the Ludendorff Bridge during the Battle of Remagen on 7 March 1945, the Germans were desperate to destroy it. On 17 March 1945, they fired eleven V-2 missiles at the bridge”


Why spend so much time on purposefully misunderstanding the original question?


Presumably they meant orbital launches.


If I understand things correctly, this launch won’t (try to) complete an orbit, either. It will make a water landing after less than one time around the earth.


To be pedantic, this launch will have orbital velocity; if it was circular it would be orbital. IOW, it's an orbit that intersects the Earth. So it is orbital by some definitions but not by others.


Right, I believe they will be a few tens of meters per second short of orbital velocity.




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