Rocket Lab @RocketLabOur next launch attempt for the 'Symphony In The Stars' mission is now scheduled for Tuesday, June 24th.Launch window opens:🚀NZT | 7:00 PM 🚀07:00 UTC 🚀EDT | 03:00 AM🚀PDT | 12:00 AM Mission info: https://bit.ly/3xAxsql
1143-EX-ST-2025 & 0459-EX-CR-2025 [Jun 10]QuoteRequesting to conduct continued EMI testing of the Dream Chaser spacecraft (Call Sign WX9XBF) in order to ensure mission safety and support flight readiness. Additional considerations regarding the EMI testing are also provided on a confidential basis. The rationale for confidential treatment, reproduced herein, is as in file number 0660-EX-ST-2024 (grant call sign WX9XQL) which has a description of the mission to International Space Station which the testing is supporting. Two additional Exhibits are provided in this respect, replacing the Exhibit previously provided with this application.Operation Start Date: 06/20/2025Operation End Date: 12/20/2025
Requesting to conduct continued EMI testing of the Dream Chaser spacecraft (Call Sign WX9XBF) in order to ensure mission safety and support flight readiness. Additional considerations regarding the EMI testing are also provided on a confidential basis. The rationale for confidential treatment, reproduced herein, is as in file number 0660-EX-ST-2024 (grant call sign WX9XQL) which has a description of the mission to International Space Station which the testing is supporting. Two additional Exhibits are provided in this respect, replacing the Exhibit previously provided with this application.Operation Start Date: 06/20/2025Operation End Date: 12/20/2025
Jun 23 14:15To recapThis will conclude live coverage of today's countdown and liftoff of the Atlas V rocket on the second Project Kuiper mission from Cape Canaveral, Florida.To recap, the United launch Alliance rocket departed Space Launch Complex-41 at 6:54:30 a.m. EDT to deliver into orbit the next 27 Kuiper satellites for the LEO constellation.
William Harwood @rocketksc.bsky.socialA5/Kuiper 2: LIFTOFF! At 6:54:30am EDT (1054 UTC)
ULA’s next launch is the first Vulcan mission for the U.S. Space Force, USSF-106.
https://twitter.com/SpaceX/status/1937155267126251574June 25th launch date, though Axiom and SpaceX pages haven't been updated yet.
UPDATED JUNE 23, 2025...FALCON 9The next SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch the Axiom-4 spaceflight participant mission to the International Space Station from pad 39A on June 25 earliest around 2:30 a.m. EDT. The first stage will land back at the Cape about eight minutes after launch. A Falcon 9 will launch a Starlink batch from pad 40 on June 25 at 12:33-4:33 p.m. EDT. A Falcon 9 will launch A Falcon 9 will launch a Starlink batch from pad 40 on June 27 at 1-5 a.m. EDT. A Falcon 9 will launch the Meteosat MTG-S1 weather satellite for Europe from pad 40 on early July TBA. Upcoming launches include more Starlink batches.VULCAN & ATLAS VThe next United Launch Alliance Vulcan rocket will launch USSF-106 for the U.S. Space Force on TBD.NEW GLENNThe second flight of Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket is scheduled for August 15 at the very earliest.
SpaceX is targeting Monday, June 23 for a Falcon 9 launch of the Transporter-14 mission to low-Earth orbit from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The 50-minute launch window opens at 2:25 p.m. PT.
William Harwood @rocketksc.bsky.socialF9/Transporter 14: SpaceX launched more than 70 small sats and other payloads today in the company's 14th "rideshare" mission; liftoff from pad 4E at the Vandenberg Space Force Base, CA, came at 5:25pm EDT (2125 UTC); this was the 2nd F9 launch today, the 77th so far this year and 494th overall
One more detail: 02:31:51 EDT / 06:31:51 UTC / 08:31:51 CEST / 09:31:51 ДМВ to be precise
Transporter-14 Post-DeploymentDerived from individual Post-Deployment Transporter-14 state vectors for each object in the initial deployment, provided by SpaceX. Launch: 2025-06-23 21:25:30.178 UTC.Deployments: 2025-06-23 22:19:41.638 UTC to 2025-06-24 00:09:20.998 UTC.
Rocket Lab @RocketLabWe’re standing down from today’s Electron launch attempt to allow time for additional checkouts. A new launch date for the ‘Symphony In The Stars’ mission will be shared once those operations are complete.
NS-33Launch TimeSun Jun 29, 2025 12:00 GMT
Capella 17 (Capella Acadia 7) with ...
D-Orbit press release for the two missions onboard just popped : https://www.dorbit.space/media/6/36.pdfLots of hosted payloads, the Plan-S constellation and two LEMUR notably.EDIT: Missions Booklets dropped as well.
Fino Mornasco, Italy, June 24, 2025 – On June 23, 2025, D-Orbit, a global leader in space logistics and orbital transportation, launched Space Bound and Skytrail, the 18th and 19th commercial missions of ION Satellite Carrier (ION), its orbital transfer vehicle (OTV), aboard SpaceX’s Transporter-14 mission...Collaborating with new and recurring passengersThe two ION vehicles are carrying payloads from a diverse range of commercial, institutional, and research entities. These include:• Two LEMUR 4U satellites by Spire Global: the satellites combine a Spire-built platform, and a Lacuna-built IoT gateway, expanding Lacuna Space's IoT constellation, which is designed to deliver low-cost, reliable global connections to sensors and mobile equipment in remote locations.
Starlink G10-16 Pre-LaunchDerived from a pre-launch Starlink-G10-16 state vector, provided by SpaceX. SupGP data is provided for the entire stack, as well as one for a single satellite.Launch: 2025-06-25 16:39:00 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 17:43:26.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 16:39:00 UTC to 2025-06-25 16:41:09 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #1Launch: 2025-06-25 16:41:10 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 17:45:36.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 16:41:10 UTC to 2025-06-25 16:41:49 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #2Launch: 2025-06-25 16:59:40 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 18:04:06.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 16:59:40 UTC to 2025-06-25 17:06:29 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #3Launch: 2025-06-25 17:10:00 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 18:14:26.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 17:10:00 UTC to 2025-06-25 17:14:59 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #4Launch: 2025-06-25 17:22:00 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 18:26:26.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 17:22:00 UTC to 2025-06-25 17:31:49 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #5Launch: 2025-06-25 19:03:10 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 20:07:36.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 19:03:10 UTC to 2025-06-25 19:11:09 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #6Launch: 2025-06-25 19:14:30 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 20:18:56.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 19:14:30 UTC to 2025-06-25 19:24:59 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #7Launch: 2025-06-25 19:54:50 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 20:59:16.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 19:54:50 UTC to 2025-06-25 19:56:09 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #8Launch: 2025-06-25 20:14:10 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 21:18:36.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 20:14:10 UTC to 2025-06-25 20:18:59 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #9Launch: 2025-06-25 20:19:00 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 21:23:26.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 20:19:00 UTC to 2025-06-25 20:25:29 UTC. Backup Launch Opportunity #10Launch: 2025-06-25 20:30:00 UTC.Deploy: 2025-06-25 21:34:26.940 UTC.Launch window: 2025-06-25 20:30:00 UTC to 2025-06-25 20:32:59 UTC.
UPDATED JUNE 23, 2025...FALCON 9The next SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch the Axiom-4 spaceflight participant mission to the International Space Station from pad 39A on June 25 at 2:31 a.m. EDT. The first stage will land back at the Cape about eight minutes after launch. A Falcon 9 will launch a Starlink batch from pad 40 on June 25 at 12:33-4:33 p.m. EDT. A Falcon 9 will launch A Falcon 9 will launch a Starlink batch from pad 40 on June 28 at 12:26-4:26 a.m. EDT. A Falcon 9 will launch the Meteosat MTG-S1 weather satellite for Europe from pad 40 on July 1 around 5-7 p.m. EDT. Upcoming launches include more Starlink batches.
William Harwood @rocketksc.bsky.socialF9/Ax-4: LIFTOFF! At 2:31:53am EDT (0631 UTC)
William Harwood @rocketksc.bsky.socialF9/Ax-4: Descending on a jet of fire from its center engine, the booster dropped to a pinpoint Cape Canaveral landing to chalk up SpaceX's 64th Florida touchdown and its 467th successful booster recovery overall
Looks like another Starshield application/division. It's a good article and I pulled a few quotes from it.https://breakingdefense.com/2025/06/space-force-is-contracting-with-spacex-for-new-secretive-milnet-satcom-network/ [June 18]QuoteThe Space Force in contracting with SpaceX for a new government-owned, contractor-operated satellite communication constellation in low Earth orbit (LEO), called MILNET, that eventually will be integrated into the service’s grand plan for a “hybrid mesh network” combining commercial and Defense Department satellites, a senior Space Force official revealed today.QuoteMILNET, which has rarely been discussed publicly until now, comprises “480-plus” satellites, Weisler said, that will be operated by SpaceX QuoteThe network will use terminals created by SpaceX for its Starshield satellites being configured for military use, which also can link into SpaceX’s commercial Starlink constellation. The Starshield terminals have more encryption than those sold to consumers for Starlink access, he explained.
The Space Force in contracting with SpaceX for a new government-owned, contractor-operated satellite communication constellation in low Earth orbit (LEO), called MILNET, that eventually will be integrated into the service’s grand plan for a “hybrid mesh network” combining commercial and Defense Department satellites, a senior Space Force official revealed today.
MILNET, which has rarely been discussed publicly until now, comprises “480-plus” satellites, Weisler said, that will be operated by SpaceX
The network will use terminals created by SpaceX for its Starshield satellites being configured for military use, which also can link into SpaceX’s commercial Starlink constellation. The Starshield terminals have more encryption than those sold to consumers for Starlink access, he explained.
Launch has appeared on https://www.cadenaois.org/vpublic_anspdetail.jsp?view=15 with launch NET July 1st at 21:03 UTC:QuotePrimary Launch Day 01 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 02 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 03 Jul 2103Z-0015Backup Launch Day 04 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 05 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 06 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 07 Jul 2103Z-0015ZThere's a hazard area for a stage 2 reenty, indicating that SpaceX will be performing another controlled deorbit of the second stage
Primary Launch Day 01 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 02 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 03 Jul 2103Z-0015Backup Launch Day 04 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 05 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 06 Jul 2103Z-0015ZBackup Launch Day 07 Jul 2103Z-0015Z
SpaceX is targeting Wednesday, June 25 for a Falcon 9 launch of 27 Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. Liftoff is targeted for 12:39 p.m. ET, with backup opportunities available until 4:32 p.m. ET. If needed, additional opportunities are also available on Thursday, June 26 starting at 12:11 p.m. ET.A live webcast of this mission will begin about five minutes prior to liftoff, which you can watch here and on X @SpaceX. You can also watch the webcast on the new X TV app.This is the 20th flight for the first stage booster supporting this mission, which previously launched Ax-2, Euclid, Ax-3, CRS-30, SES ASTRA 1P, NG-21, and 13 Starlink missions. Following stage separation, the first stage will land on the Just Read The Instructions droneship, which will be stationed in the Atlantic Ocean.