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by diveandfight 1711 days ago
Not sure if I missed something, why did this have to be shipped across the ocean to a spaceport in French Guinea? Would it have been less of a logistical challenge to launch this out of Vandenberg in CA?
4 comments

The closer to the equator that you launch the more of an advantage you get from the rotation of the earth. Your starting velocity is higher launching from the equator than from a point closer to the poles of the earth.

It is launching on an Ariane 5 rocket which has the launch facilities in French Guiana (for the reason I mentioned above).

Edit: Vandenburg is also even worse from this perspective because in order to launch out over the ocean, you are launching against the rotation of the Earth so you have to overcome that velocity. But Vandenburg is often used for polar orbits where the rocket launches almost due south from Vandenburg over the ocean.

ah, thanks for that. I wonder if this also explains why spaceports in the U.S. have tended to be located further south.
Yep, that is definitely one of the reasons.

The other significant reason for putting a spaceport further south is the inclination of the orbit (angle of the orbital plane to the equator) is limited by the latitude of the launch site (without a secondary maneuver after launch). So for example if you launch due east (which gives the most advantage of the Earth's rotation) from Cape Canaveral, which is at a latitude of ~28 degrees, you will end up in an orbit with a 28 degree inclination. Launching further North or south you end up with a higher inclination either way. So in order to get an inclination close to equatorial it is easiest to launch closer to the equator. Its a bit hard to visualize but this article has some good explanations [0].

[0] https://www.planetary.org/articles/3450

It’s launching from French Guiana because it’s launching on Ariane 5 and that’s where it launches from.

It’s launching on Ariane 5 because it is a very powerful and incredibly reliable rocket that can carry a very large and customized fairing for this very large satellite that needs to go very far.

Mostly because its a NASA-ESA-CSA joint project. The JWST is jointly built by NASA-CSA. The ESA contribution is the launch vehicle.
I recall it was because of the payload capacity/volume of the Ariane rocket. Maybe there are better alternatives at this point.