SpaceX set to launch Transporter 14 rideshare mission
Date:
Sun, 22 Jun 2025 16:54:11 +0000
Description:
SpaceXs next mission as part of its Transporter small payload rideshare  program, Transporter 14, is The post SpaceX set to launch Transporter 14  rideshare mission appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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SpaceXs next mission as part of its Transporter small payload rideshare  program, Transporter 14, is scheduled to launch from Space Launch Complex 4E  (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Sunday, June 22, at  2:18 PM PDT (21:18 UTC). 
The launch window extends until 3:15 PM PDT (22:15 UTC). After liftoff, the  booster, B1071, will fly on a southward trajectory, placing the second stage  and rideshare payloads on a path to Sun-synchronous orbit. 
 Targeting Sunday, June 22 for a Falcon 9 launch of the Transporter-14 
mission from Space Launch Complex 4E in California. Teams are keeping an eye  on weather  
https://t.co/bJFjLCiTbK pic.twitter.com/UUJMwtwOFS 
 SpaceX (@SpaceX) June 21, 2025 
 
The booster is scheduled to land on SpaceXs Of Course I Still Love You  droneship downrange in the Pacific. A return-to-launch-site landing was  initially set to be the first stage recovery method, but SpaceX announced a  change in a pre-launch press release. Completing a return-to-launch-site  recovery depends on the booster having enough reserve performance after  meeting primary mission requirements. 
The second stage and rideshare payloads will initially enter a parking orbit  before a second burn circularizes the orbit by raising its perigee. The  payloads are typically released in multiple sequences, and the German company  Exolaunch is deploying 45 satellites with their payload deployment hardware 
on this flight. Other service providers are also launching payloads for  customers, and there are two reentry capsules onboard Transporter 14.  Exolaunch deployment hardware. (Credit: Exolaunch) 
 International cubesats 
Exolaunch, a company spun off from Technische Universitat Berlin, offers  launch services and mission management for small satellite operators. As of  June 2025, the company has launched 530 satellites on 36 launches across  vehicle types ranging from Rocket Labs Electron to SpaceXs Falcon 9, Indias  PSLV, Ariane 6, and other rockets. 
Transporter 14s complement of Exolaunch payloads will be the largest  deployment on one mission for the company. For this mission, the company has  25 new or returning customers from various countries, and will deploy 
cubesats up to 16U in size as well as microsatellites massing up to 250 kg. 
Exolaunchs customers for this flight are from the United States, the United  Kingdom, Lithuania, Finland, Belgium, Germany, Australia, Canada, South 
Korea, France, Japan, Spain, Norway, Italy, and Greece. Gilmour Space and  Exolaunch personnel posing by ElaraSat. (Credit: Gilmour Space) 
On this flight, one of the notable payloads to be deployed by Exolaunch  includes Gilmour Spaces ElaraSat bus. The 100 kg MMS-1 satellite, built by 
the Australian company that also developed the Eris launch vehicle, contains 
a hyperspectral imager from the Australian CSIRO agency that will be used to  study water quality from space. MMS-1 is the first launch of Gilmours  satellite bus. 
Another payload manifested by Exolaunch is the VanZyl-2 Earth observation  satellite. VanZyl-2 will use a thermal infrared imager and is Hydrosats 
second satellite for its constellation. Together with VanZyl-1, already in  orbit, the two satellites will image over 10 million square kilometers per 
day and will be able to observe remote areas in cloudy conditions using nine  spectral bands. These satellites fill a gap left by the Landsat satellites in  the field of Earth observation technology. The VanZyl-2 satellite. (Credit:  Hydrosat) 
Exolaunch is also flying the German Quick3 3U CubeSat. Quick3, developed by a  consortium led by the Friedrich-Schiller-Universitat Jena and built by  Konigsberg NanoAvionics, is designed to test quantum communications in orbit.  The mission will also test fundamental principles of quantum physics in  microgravity. 
Konigsberg NanoAvionics is also flying five additional payloads on this  mission through Exolaunch. One of these payloads, an effort by NASA and  Wichita State University, is designed to detect neutrinos; if it detects a  neutrino, it will be the first time this has been achieved in space. Other  payloads will expand imaging constellations, demonstrate voice communications  for monitoring air traffic, and image New Zealand before deorbiting with a  dragsail. 
D-Orbit, based in Como, Italy, is flying ION vehicles 18 and 20 on this  flight. D-Orbit is another European company offering rideshare services to  satellite customers with its ION Satellite Carrier. For this flight, the  company is hosting a 5G communications payload from France and a propulsion  system built by Pale Blue of Japan. Xonas Pulsar-0 before its launch. 
(Credit: Xona Space Systems) 
UARX Space Solutions, based in Spain, is manifesting its OSSIE orbital  transfer vehicle, which is carrying five passenger payloads. NPC Spacemind is  flying two 16U cubesat deployers, while Xona Space Systems of Burlingame,  California, is flying its Pulsar-0 navigation satellite. 
Other satellite payloads include the University of North Dakotas two 3U  CubeSats, the University of Aucklands 3U CubeSat, Starfish Spaces Otter Pup 
2, and Capellas Acadia-7 synthetic aperture radar Earth observation 
satellite. The Starfish Otter Pup 2 will attempt the first-ever docking with  an unprepared commercial satellite, unmodified for docking, in low-Earth  orbit. 
NASAs PolArization and Directivity X-ray Experiment (PADRE) is also on board.  PADRE and its two instruments will observe the Sun in X-rays to study  polarization from solar flares. NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center is  collaborating with the University of California Berkeley Space Sciences  Laboratory, the Southwest Research Institute, and two institutions in Europe  on PADRE. The Varda W-4 reentry capsule. (Credit: Varda Space Industries) 
 Reentry capsules 
Besides the varied array of cubesats and other spacecraft on this flight, two  reentry capsules are also flying aboard Transporter-14. Varda Space is flying  the fourth of its Winnebago capsules, known as W-4. W-4 is carrying a  pharmaceutical payload and will try a solution-based crystallization  manufacturing process. This process can make structures that are otherwise  impossible to produce on Earth. 
W-4 is the first spacecraft solely built by Varda. The companys three 
previous missions used buses made by Rocket Lab. W-4 also features Vardas  first in-house heat shield, made up of a version of the Phenolic Impregnated  Carbon Ablator (PICA) shield used by spacecraft like Crew Dragon.  Conformal-PICA was developed by NASA, which is working with Varda on C-PICAs  commercial production. Vardas W-3 after landing safely at the Koonibba Test  Range in Australia. (Credit: Varda Space Industries) 
Varda also now holds a Part 450 license from the Federal Aviation  Administration, effective for five years, which allows for unlimited capsule  reentries under the same license, provided Varda uses the same flight 
profile. Although the first Varda capsule was recovered at the Utah Test and  Training Range near Dugway Proving Ground, the companys primary recovery site  is now in the Koonibba Test Range in Australia. 
Celestis Space contracted with Munich and Bordeaux-based The Exploration  Company to fly its Perseverance space funeral mission on its Nyx capsule. The  Nyx capsule has a payload capacity of up to 300 kg, and the spacecraft is 2.5  m in diameter. 
This capsule is also a subscale test of a larger, four-meter-diameter Nyx  capsule to follow, and it carries five additional payloads in addition to  Perseverance and the remains of 100 people. After the capsule returns to  Earth, the remains will be sent to the loved ones of those who flew in the  capsule. The Nyx capsule during integration in Europe. (Credit: The  Exploration Company) 
A pressurized cylinder built by London-based BioOrbit is flying a drug  production experiment, while the MayaSat-1, a 1U CubeSat-sized enclosure  developed by Slovenia-based Genesis Space Flight Laboratories, is also aboard  the pressurized section and has 980 unique biological samples onboard. Other  experimental payloads from Sweden, Australia, and Germany are also onboard  Nyx. 
Nyx will attempt a return to Earth after around three hours in orbit, and the  company will consider the mission a partial success if it, at least, gets 
past stabilizing the capsule and placing the heat shield forward, and into 
the atmospheric reentry phase. If all goes well, the capsule will splash down  under three parachutes into the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii. The planned Nyx  commercial cargo spacecraft. (Credit: The Exploration Company) 
The payloads on Transporter 14, whether they return to Earth or not, are  varied in design and purpose, and reflect the growing international and  commercial nature of space exploration. 
This flight will be the 77th Falcon 9 flight of 2025, and the 29th orbital  attempt out of VSFB this year. SpaceX is working to fly up to 170 Falcon 9  flights overall in 2025. 
( Lead image: A erial view of SLC-4E at the Vandenberg Space Force Base with 
a Falcon 9 being prepared for flight. Credit: SpaceX) 
 
The post SpaceX set to launch Transporter 14 rideshare mission appeared first  on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/06/transporter-14/
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