Overview
Vandenberg Space Force Base (SFB) is a military installation on California's central coast, serving as America's primary launch site for polar and sun-synchronous orbits. Located at 34.7°N with a clear southward trajectory over the Pacific Ocean, Vandenberg can reach orbital inclinations from 70° to retrograde (sun-synchronous at 97–98°) — orbits that are impossible to reach safely from Cape Canaveral due to populated land downrange.
Facility Details
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Location | Lompoc, California, USA |
| Coordinates | 34.7420°N, 120.5724°W |
| Operator | US Space Force, SpaceX, ULA |
| First Orbital Launch | 28 February 1959 (Discoverer 1) |
| Orbital Access | Polar (90°), sun-synchronous (97–98°), retrograde |
| Optimal For | Earth observation, weather, reconnaissance, Starlink polar shells |
Active Launch Pads
SLC-4E: SpaceX's west coast pad for Falcon 9. Used for Starlink polar shell deployments, Earth observation satellites and national security missions. SpaceX has increased Vandenberg launch cadence significantly since 2022.
SLC-3E: ULA's pad for Atlas V and Vulcan Centaur. Used for NRO reconnaissance satellite launches and other national security payloads requiring polar orbits.
Why Vandenberg?
Polar and sun-synchronous orbits require launching approximately north or south. From Cape Canaveral, a southward trajectory would overfly populated areas of the Caribbean and South America. Vandenberg solves this — rockets launch southward over open Pacific Ocean with no land in the flight path for thousands of kilometres. This makes it the only US site that can safely reach polar orbits, which are essential for Earth observation, weather monitoring, reconnaissance and Starlink's polar coverage shells.
History
Originally established as an Army base in 1941, Vandenberg became a missile and space launch facility in the 1950s. The first polar orbit satellite (Discoverer 1) launched from Vandenberg in 1959. During the Cold War, it was the primary launch site for US military reconnaissance satellites (Corona, KH-series). Today it supports approximately 20–30 launches per year, primarily SpaceX Falcon 9 missions.