Launch Roundup: Orbital launches from five countries planned
Date:
Mon, 12 May 2025 21:37:41 +0000
Description:
On the heels of a busy April, activity is ramping up for May with launches 
The post Launch Roundup: Orbital launches from five countries planned 
appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
On the heels of a busy April, activity is ramping up for May with launches  from five countries and six launch sites on three continents this week. A new  orbital launch site in Australia is scheduled to make its debut, with 
launches from sites in India, China, New Zealand, and the United States  expected as well. 
Australian launch provider Gilmour Space is preparing its Eris orbital rocket  for its first flight from a launch site in Bowen, Queensland, Australia.  Across the Tasman Sea, Rocket Lab is preparing an Electron to fly an Earth  observation satellite for iQPS. The Indian Space Research Organisation is  planning its own Earth observation satellite launch from Satish Dhawan Space  Centre in India. 
A pair of launches is planned from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in  China, including one with the methane-fueled ZhuQue-2E. Finally, SpaceX is  planning three Falcon 9 launches with Starlink satellites from its pads in  California and Florida. 
 Starlink Satellites are deployed during the Group 12-8 mission. (Credit:  SpaceX) 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 15-4 
SpaceX is set to launch just the third flight for Group 15 of its Starlink  constellation from Vandenberg Space Force Base (VSFB) in California. The  Starlink Group 15-4 mission is scheduled for Monday, May 12, at 5:00 PM PDT  (00:00 UTC Tuesday, May 13) at the start of a four-hour window which ends at  9:00 PM PDT (04:00 UTC May 13). 
Starlink Group 15-4, using a booster not yet publicly known, will carry 26  satellites to low-Earth orbit (LEO) after flying a southeast trajectory from  Space Launch Complex-4E (SLC-4E). The booster is expected to land on the Of  Course I Still Love You droneship out in the Pacific, while the satellites  will be lofted to an initial orbit of 267 by 279 km inclined 70.01 degrees. 
This launch is set to be the 57th Falcon 9 flight of 2025 and the seventh  Falcon 9 flight of May. All Falcon 9 flights so far this month have been  Starlink flights, though GPS and Nusantara Lima missions are still scheduled  for May. CZ-2D launches from Jiuquan. (Credit: Shanghai Aerospace) 
 Chang Zheng 2D | Unknown Payload 
A Chang Zheng 2D (CZ-2D) is scheduled to fly out of Site 9401, also known as  SLS-2, at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center (JSLC) in the Inner Mongolia  region of China. Launch is scheduled for 04:10 UTC on Tuesday, May 13, with  the launch window lasting until 05:21 UTC. 
The payload is not yet known, but the rocket will take a southwest launch  trajectory out of Jiuquan. The trajectory appears to support a 
Sun-synchronous orbit, which is commonly used by various Earth observation 
and reconnaissance satellites. 
This flight is the fourth CZ-2D flight of 2025 as the venerable rocket  continues its service despite newer vehicles coming online in China in recent  years. A stack of Starlink v2 Mini satellites before being enclosed in their  fairing. (Credit: SpaceX) 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 6-67 
The second Falcon 9 launch of the week is scheduled to fly out of Space 
Launch Complex-40 (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS)  in Florida. Starlink Group 6-67 is set to launch on Wednesday, May 14, at  11:43 AM EDT (15:43 UTC) with the four-hour window lasting until 3:43 PM EDT  (19:43 UTC). 
Starlink Group 6-67, using a booster not yet publicly known, will fly on a  southeast trajectory and will take a batch of Starlink v2 Mini satellites to  an orbit inclined 43 degrees to the equator. The booster is scheduled to land  on one of SpaceXs two east coast droneships out in the Atlantic. 
This flight is the 58th launch of a Falcon 9 in 2025 and the eighth Falcon 9  flight in May. ZhuQue-2E is rolled to the pad. (Credit: Landspace) 
 ZhuQue-2E | Unknown Payload 
The second launch from JSLC this week is of a Landspace ZhuQue-2E from Site 
96 in the Gobi Desert. Launch is scheduled for Thursday, May 15, at 04:10 
UTC, with the launch window lasting until 04:40 UTC. 
Like the CZ-2D launch, the ZhuQue-2E is flying on a southwest trajectory,  which supports payloads flying to Sun-synchronous orbits. The payload is not  yet known, but Earth observation and reconnaissance satellites, along with  some weather satellites, commonly use Sun-synchronous orbits. These orbits  allow for observations of a given place at the same local time on every pass. 
This flight is the fifth launch of a ZhuQue-2 vehicle, which is a medium-lift  rocket capable of flying up to 6,000 kg to LEO. ZhuQue-2E uses liquid methane  and liquid oxygen as propellants for its four TQ-12 engines, and is the first  methane-fueled launch vehicle to reach orbit. View of Eris rocket and the  launch pad at the spaceport in Bowen, Australia. (Credit: Gilmour Space) 
 Eris | TestFlight1 
Gilmour Space, a commercial launch provider based in the Australian state of  Queensland, has developed a small satellite launcher known as Eris. Though  Australia did host some satellite launches from the remote desert outback  during the Cold War, Eris is Australias first sovereign orbital satellite  launcher. 
The first Eris mission, TestFlight1, is scheduled to launch no earlier than  Wednesday, May 15, from the Orbital Launch Pad at the Bowen Orbital Spaceport  on the Queensland coast, located approximately 200 km southeast of 
Townsville. No launch time has yet been provided. 
Eris will launch on a northeasterly trajectory over the Coral Sea and carry a  test payload for the companys micro-satellite bus, which they hope to deploy  into LEO. A successful orbital mission would result in Australia joining a  still-exclusive club of nations that have launched satellites to orbit using  indigenous launch vehicles. The Bowen Orbital Spaceport is Australias first  licensed commercial orbital launch facility. (Credit: Gilmour Space) 
The 25 m tall Eris launch vehicle uses three stages and is capable of  launching up to 305 kg to a 500 km equatorial orbit, which places it roughly  in the same class as the Rocket Lab Electron. The first stage uses four 
Sirius engines, which use a hybrid system similar in principle to Virgin  Galactics engine on its SpaceShipTwo suborbital tourist spacecraft. 
Another hybrid Sirius motor is used on the second stage, with a liquid-fueled  engine utilized on the third stage. A successful orbital launch would be the  first for a rocket powered by hybrid engines. 
Gilmour Space is planning to follow up on its initial Eris Block 1 launcher  with an Eris Block 2 vehicle with higher performance, similar to the Firefly  Alpha. A later Eris Heavy may also be developed, enabling the company to 
field a medium-lift launch vehicle. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 15-5 
The second Falcon 9 launch this week from California is planned for Friday,  May 16, at 6:00 AM PDT (13:00 UTC) from SLC-4E. The window, as usual, is four  hours long and ends at 10:00 AM PDT (17:00 UTC). 
Starlink Group 15-5, using a booster not yet publicly known, is flying 
another batch of Starlink v2 Mini satellites to LEO. The booster, after 
flying on a southeast trajectory, will be recovered on Of Course I Still Love  You , permanently based in Long Beach. 
Starlink Group 15-5 will be the 59th Falcon 9 flight of 2025 and the ninth  Falcon 9 flight of May, as the company continues to work toward breaking its  record of 132 launches in 2024. Electron standing on the launch pad at Mahia,  New Zealand. (Credit: Rocket Lab) 
 Electron | The Sea God Sees 
Rocket Lab is scheduled to launch the The Sea God Sees mission on Saturday,  May 17, at 08:15 UTC from Launch Complex 1A (LC-1A) at the companys private  spaceport on the Mahia Peninsula in New Zealand. The one-hour launch window  ends at 09:15 UTC. 
Electron will launch on a southeast trajectory and inject the payload into a  575 km circular orbit inclined 43 degrees to the equator. The payload is a  synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite for iQPS, a Japanese commercial 
Earth imagery provider. The QPS-SAR-10 satellite, also known as WADATSUMI-I  after the Japanese sea god, can observe Earths surface through cloud cover 
and at night. 
The Sea God Sees is the second of an eight-launch contract for flights in 
2025 and 2026 for iQPS to build up its constellation. In addition, this 
flight is the sixth mission of 2025 for Rocket Lab, following 16 in 2024 as  the company works on fielding its medium-lift partially reusable Neutron  rocket in the coming years. A PSLV-XL rocket launches from the Satish Dhawan  Space Centre in February 2017. (Credit: ISRO) 
 PSLV-XL | EOS-09 
The final scheduled launch of the week is another SAR Earth observation  satellite. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) EOS-09 mission, 
using the Indian Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle-XL (PSLV-XL) C61, is 
scheduled to launch on Sunday, May 18, at 01:29 UTC from the First Launch Pad  at the Satish Dhawan Space Center on the Bay of Bengal. 
The PSLV-XL will fly on a southerly trajectory, which will place the EOS-09  satellite into a circular Sun-synchronous orbit at 610 km altitude, enabling  full coverage of the Earth. EOS-09, also known as RISAT-1B, makes its  observations in the C-band. It masses 1,710 kg and is one in a series of  satellites developed by India for Earth observation and reconnaissance. 
This is the second mission of 2025 for ISRO and the first for the PSLV-XL.  ISRO is planning to fly a number of missions this year, including the first  uncrewed test flight of its Gaganyaan crewed spacecraft. 
( Lead image: Falcon 9 launches from Florida. Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: Orbital launches from five countries planned 
appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
======================================================================
Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/05/launch-roundup-051225/
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