Launch Roundup: Alpha, Spectrum, Electron, and Falcon 9 set to fly
Date:
Mon, 24 Mar 2025 22:19:44 +0000
Description:
The week ahead includes four launches scheduled for Wednesday and the third  Electron rocket to The post Launch Roundup: Alpha, Spectrum, Electron, and  Falcon 9 set to fly appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
The week ahead includes four launches scheduled for Wednesday and the third  Electron rocket to fly within 12 days. SpaceX kicked off the week with the  launch of a classified mission on Monday. Firefly Aerospace will attempt the  sixth flight of its Alpha rocket following a delay due to range constraints  earlier in the month. Three Starlink missions and a Chang Zheng 3B are also  scheduled to launch this week. 
Following a scrub on Monday due to unfavorable winds. Isar Aerospace is  expected to conduct the first orbital launch by a European rocket from  continental Europe on Tuesday. This maiden launch of its Spectrum rocket will  also be the inaugural orbital launch from the Andya Spaceport in Norway. 
 
This week will also mark the conclusion of the first quarter of 2025 and, 
with it, new turnaround records and a revised annual cadence target for  SpaceX. Booster B1088 set a new first-stage turnaround record of just over  nine days on last weeks NROL-57 mission from Vandenberg on March 21. This  quickly followed the launch of the SPHEREx and PUNCH mission from the same 
pad at SLC-4E on March 11 and was a notable improvement on the previous  booster turnaround record of 14 days. 
 
The company also set a pad turnaround record at Space Launch Complex 40  (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on March 15. The Starlink  Group 12-16 mission launched from SLC-40 just two days, eight hours, 59  minutes, and 40 seconds after the Starlink Group 12-21 mission from the same  pad, breaking the previous record by nearly six hours. This launch also set  another record for SpaceX, marking its third launch in 12.5 hours following  the Crew-10 and Transporter-13 missions. 
SpaceX recently revised its goal to launch 180 times this year in reaction to  recent challenges regarding the loss of booster B1086 and the increased  refurbishment time for some of its recovered Falcon 9 boosters. The companys  new target of 170 averages out to 14 monthly launches. Pending how volatile  this weeks schedule proves to be, SpaceX looks to complete the first quarter  with 38 launches across its fleet. This puts the company only a handful of  launches away from meeting its revised cadence goal, with plenty of time to  catch up. 
Rocket Lab is ahead of last years cadence, with five Electron launches in the  first quarter of 2025. Two of these launches occurred last week within three  days of each other. This weeks planned launch would set another company 
record with three launches within two weeks. Electron will finish the quarter  as the second most launched rocket of the year and is on course to surpass  last years record of 14 orbital launches. As the month comes to a close, 
there will have been 67 orbital launch attempts worldwide, a six percent  increase from the previous year. Isar Aerospaces Spectrum rocket awaits its  maiden launch on the pad at Andya Spaceport. (Credit: Isar Aerospace, Brady  Kenniston for NSF) 
 Spectrum | Going Full Spectrum 
Isar Aerospace is preparing for the first-ever orbital launch attempt of a  European rocket from continental Europe (outside of Russia). Delayed from the  weekend, an attempt on Monday was scrubbed due to unfavorable winds. The  launch attempt has been rescheduled to Tuesday, March 25, at 11:30 UTC. 
The companys two-stage Spectrum launch vehicle will make its maiden flight  from the Andya Spaceport on the Norwegian island of Andya. The spaceport has  supported over 1,200 suborbital and sounding rocket launches since 1962 and 
is now planning to support up to 30 orbital missions per year. 
The launch will fly on a northwest trajectory out of Andoya, which would 
place a payload in a retrograde orbit. This demonstration flight, however, is  carrying no deployable payload and will instead deliver valuable in-flight  data to inform future iterations of the vehicle. 
Spectrum stands 28 m high with a two-meter diameter and can deliver 1,000 kg  to low-Earth orbit (LEO) or 700 kg to Sun-synchronous orbit (SSO). Nine  3D-printed Aquila engines on the first stage burn liquid propane and oxygen 
as propellants. The second stage is powered by a single vacuum-optimized  Aquila engine, which is capable of in-orbit restarts. The company notes that  these high-pressure turbopump-fed engines have been designed in-house and  offer clean propulsion that delivers the highest density-specific impulse of  all carbon fuels. Illustration of Lockheed Martins LM 400 satellite bus  technology demonstrator in orbit. (Credit: Lockheed Martin) 
 Alpha | Message In A Booster 
Firefly Aerospace is planning the sixth launch of its Alpha rocket this week  after standing down from last weeks attempt due to an unspecified range  conflict. The Message In A Booster mission is set to be the first of four  worldwide orbital launch attempts scheduled for Wednesday, March 26. Alpha  will launch from Space Launch Complex 2W (SLC-2W) at the Vandenberg Space  Force Base (VSFB) in California during a 69-minute launch window that opens 
at 8:37 AM PDT (13:37 UTC). 
A technology demonstrator for Lockheed Martins LM400 satellite bus is flying  on this mission as the primary payload. This versatile new mid-sized 
satellite bus can accommodate a variety of missions, including remote 
sensing, communications, imaging, and radar operations. The LM400 Pathfinder  will help prove the technology in orbit and contribute towards risk reduction  before flying customer missions. While this demonstrator will be deployed to  LEO, the platform is adaptable to multiple orbits and launch configurations,  catering to military, civil, and commercial applications. Payload  encapsulation of Lockheed Martins LM 400 in mid-March. (Credit: Firefly  Aerospace) 
This flight marks the first of up to 25 flights for Lockheed Martin as part 
of a multi-launch agreement with Firefly, which will span the next five 
years. The two-stage expendable Alpha vehicle stands just under 30 m in 
height and can deliver 1,030 kg to LEO. Four high-performance Reaver engines  on the first stage burn liquid kerosene and oxygen in a tap-off cycle, while 
a single Lightning engine using the same technology powers the upper stage. 
NASASpaceflight is providing launch live stream production services for  Firefly Flight A006. 
 Electron/Curie | Finding Hot Wildfires Near You 
Rocket Lab will launch its third Electron in two weeks on Wednesday, March 
26, at 15:30 UTC from Launch Complex 1B (LC-1B) at the companys launch  facility in New Zealand. Finding Hot WildFires Near You will mark a  significant achievement in rapid launch cadence for Rocket Lab, with the  payloads onboard being launched within four months of signing the launch  services contract. The mission will deploy the latest group of eight  satellites for OroraTechs OTC-P1 constellation into a 550 km SSO. Patch for  Rocket Labs Finding Hot Wildfires Near You mission. (Credit: Rocket Lab) 
Thermal infrared cameras enable satellites to monitor wildfires globally and  support a faster response to safeguard forests, communities, and critical  infrastructure. Combining real-time data with AI algorithms, the technology  delivers early detection of hotspots from over 25 satellite and ground data  sources for customers that include governments and industry partners. The  company plans to increase the constellation to 100 satellites by 2028. This  mission will bring the total number of satellites launched by Electron to 
224. 
 Chang Zheng 3B/E | Unknown Payload 
A Chang Zheng 3B/E (CZ-3B/E) is expected to launch on Wednesday, March 26, at  15:55 UTC from Launch Complex 2 (LC-2) at the Xichang Satellite Launch Center  in China. This is one of three active pads at Xichang, situated in the 
Sichuan Province of southwestern China, and one of two that conduct orbital  launches. LC-2 is commonly used to loft satellites into geostationary orbits,  including those for the Beidou navigation constellation. While details of the  payload are currently unknown, the missions launch window lasts 35 minutes. 
This would be the fifth flight of a CZ-3B/E this year. The four preceding  flights carried payloads to a geostationary transfer orbit with two 
classified TJSW missions, the ChinaSat 10R communication satellite, and the  Shijian 25 technology demonstrator. Starlink Satellites are deployed during  the Group 12-8 mission. (Credit: SpaceX) 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 11-7 
Starlink Group 11-7, the first of three scheduled Starlink missions this 
week, will fly from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at VSFB in California.  The typical four-hour launch window opens on Wednesday, March 26, at 3:00 PM  PDT (22:00 UTC). This mission has been delayed from the weekend and will fly  on a southeast trajectory carrying another batch of Starlink v2-Mini  satellites to LEO. 
The booster for this mission has not yet been confirmed but is expected to  land downrange on the autonomous droneship Of Course I Still Love You, which  will be stationed in the Pacific. To date, every Starlink Group 11 mission 
has flown from VSFB, with another due to fly Sunday evening. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 6-80 
A Falcon 9 will fly the second Starlink mission of the week, Starlink Group  6-80, from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Space Force  Station in Florida on Sunday, March 30. A four-hour launch window opens at  5:16 PM EDT (19:16 UTC), during which another batch of Starlink v2-Mini  satellites will be lofted into LEO. 
Ahead of this launch, 71 previous Starlink missions carried satellites into  the Group 6 shell  by far the largest of the Starlink shells. Satellites  within the Group 6 shell operate in a 43-degree orbit at an altitude of 559  km. The booster and droneship supporting this mission are not yet known. 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 11-13 
Starlink Group 11-3 will launch from SLC-4E at VSFB on Sunday, March 30, at  5:23 PM PDT (00:23 UTC on March 31), with the typical four-hour launch window  available. Assuming an on-time launch, this mission will come just four days  after Starlink Group 11-7. 
The booster for this mission has not yet been confirmed but is expected to  land atop Of Course I Still Love You, which will be stationed downrange from  SLC-4E in the Pacific. This mission will mark the 37th Falcon 9 mission of  2025 and the 67th orbital launch globally. 
 (Lead image: Falcon 9 launches from Florida. Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: Alpha, Spectrum, Electron, and Falcon 9 set to fly  appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/03/launch-roundup-032425/
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