Launch Roundup: Gilmour Space to make debut, SpaceX plans east coast  doubleheader
Date:
Mon, 30 Jun 2025 17:03:50 +0000
Description:
With the month of June coming to a close and July on the horizon, the The 
post Launch Roundup: Gilmour Space to make debut, SpaceX plans east coast  doubleheader appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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With the month of June coming to a close and July on the horizon, the global  launch manifest remains jam-packed. SpaceX is set to kick off the week with  two Falcon 9 launches from Florida, with a Starlink mission and the launch of  a geostationary weather satellite. The maiden flight of Gilmour Spaces Eris  small satellite rocket is scheduled for later in the week, followed by a  Chinese launch from Xichang and a Progress cargo flight to the International  Space Station. 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 10-25 SpaceX looks to start the week with the  launch of a Starlink mission on a Falcon 9 from Space Launch Complex 40  (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS) in Florida. 
Liftoff is scheduled for no earlier than Tuesday, July 1, at 2:06 AM EDT  (06:06 UTC), toward the beginning of a four-hour launch window. The Falcon 9  rocket will fly on a northeast trajectory out of the Cape, with the booster  set to attempt a landing on the deck of one of the two east coast droneships  in the Atlantic Ocean. Meanwhile, the second stage will continue on to  low-Earth orbit (LEO), carrying a batch of 27 Starlink v2 Mini satellites for  internet connectivity. A stack of Starlink v2 Mini satellites ready for  launch. (Credit: SpaceX) 
This mission will mark the 82nd flight of a Falcon 9 in 2025, and the 500th  mission for the rocket since its debut launch from SLC-40 in June 2010. 
SpaceX hopes to achieve up to 170 Falcon launches before years end. Falcon 9 
| MTG-S1 The second SpaceX launch of the week could launch within 15 hours of  the first, with liftoff of the MTG-S1 mission scheduled for no earlier than  Tuesday, July 1, at 5:03 PM EDT (21:03 UTC) from the historic Launch Complex  39A (LC-39A) at Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida. Teams will have a  two-hour and 27-minute window available for launch. Falcon 9 will launch due  east out of KSC, using the Earths rotation to gain extra horizontal velocity.  As the upper stage transports the payload to an initial parking orbit, the  first stage will return to land on one of SpaceXs two east coast droneships  stationed downrange in the Atlantic. The upper stage will then perform a burn  to place the payload into a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO) before  deployment. The payload for this mission is the Meteosat Third  Generation-Sounder 1 (MTG-S1) weather satellite, to be operated by the  European Space Agency (ESA) and the European Organization for the 
Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT). The spacecraft was  originally slated to fly on the third flight of Ariane 6 but was remanifested  to Falcon 9 due to scheduling reasons. One day to launch! The MTG-S1  satellite, carrying the @CopernicusEU Sentinel-4 instrument, is now safely  inside the Falcon 9 fairing ahead of launch. 
Liftoff is scheduled at 23:03 CEST. Credits: @SpaceX  pic.twitter.com/AJRDo4Uan0 
 ESA Earth Observation (@ESA_EO) June 30, 2025 
 MTG-S1, massing in at 3,800 kg at launch and set to be renamed Meteosat-13  after commissioning, is one of three MTG satellites that will provide 
improved weather forecasting data for Europe and Northern Africa. The  satellite is outfitted with an infrared sounder  the first for Europe in  geostationary orbit  and an ultraviolet, visible, near-infrared light (UVN)  spectrometer, provided by ESA as part of the Sentinel-4 instrument package.  The Sentinel-4 payload will monitor air quality over Europe, focusing on  detecting trace gas concentrations and aerosols in the atmosphere. The data  collected across the three spectral bands will supply hourly air pollution  information, thus supporting near-real-time operations. The launch of MTG-S1  will be the 83rd Falcon 9 launch of the year. Eris | TestFlight1 In what will  be a momentous occasion for Australia, the debut flight of its first 
homegrown launch vehicle is scheduled to take place within a ten-hour launch  window no earlier than Thursday, July 3, at 7:30 AM AEST (21:30 UTC on  Wednesday, July 2) from the Bowen Orbital Spaceport at Abbot Point. After  years of development, testing, and regulatory approvals, Gilmour Spaces  three-stage Eris rocket is set to proudly carry the banner of Australia into  orbit. The first two stages of Eris utilize hybrid propellants, consisting of  a 3D-printed solid fuel grain and a hydrogen peroxide liquid oxidizer, while  the third stage uses solely liquid propellants. TestFlight1 Update Rocket's 
up but the winds aren't in our favour. 
Pushing the start of our #TestFlight1 launch window to    ()  AEST. 
Follow us here, or our Missions page for the latest. 
(Photo credit to Ben S) pic.twitter.com/2Zra8iKHiX 
 Gilmour Space (@GilmourSpace) June 30, 2025 
 Eris will fly on a northeasterly trajectory out of the Bowen Orbital  Spaceport after liftoff, as Gilmour Space hopes to reach LEO on the vehicles  first flight. A successful launch would mark the first for an 
Australian-built rocket and the first for a hybrid-fueled rocket. The debut  launch of Eris was originally scheduled to take place in May, but was  postponed after an unexpected power surge fault triggered the deployment of  the rockets payload fairing during preflight checks. A replacement fairing 
was sent from Gilmours Gold Coast factory to Bowen and installed, and no  damage to the vehicle or launch pad was observed. Eris will not carry an  operational payload for its first launch, though Gilmour Space has humorously  placed a container of Vegemite flavor spread inside the payload fairing. 
Chang Zheng 4B | Unknown Payload Chinas only scheduled launch of the week is  set to occur no earlier than Thursday, July 3, at 09:35 UTC. A Chang Zheng 4B  (CZ-4B) rocket will take flight from Launch Complex 3 (LC-3) at the Xichang  Satellite Launch Center (XSLC), flying on a southeasterly trajectory. The  three-stage CZ-4B launcher utilizes hypergolic propellants and is capable of  sending up to 4,200 kg to LEO and approximately 1,500 kg to a Sun-synchronous  orbit (SSO). Across its 26-year tenure, the vehicle has flown 53 times with 
52 successes, launching a number of payloads for the Shijian, Yaogan, and  Ziyuan remote sensing satellite constellations. Progress MS-31 undergoing  processing before launch. (Credit: RSC Rnergia) Soyuz 2.1a | Progress MS-31  The Russian Space Agency, Roscosmos, is looking to resupply the International  Space Station (ISS) with a Progress cargo mission this week. Liftoff from 
Site 31/6 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan is set to take place on  Thursday, July 3, at 3:32 PM EDT (19:32 UTC), with Progress delivering  approximately 2,500 kg of food, water, and equipment for the crew aboard the  Station. The Soyuz rocket will fly on a northeasterly trajectory, placing the  Progress MS-31 spacecraft on a trajectory to rendezvous with the ISS. 
Progress will dock to the Zvezda service module on Saturday, July 5, at 
around 5:27 PM EDT (21:27 UTC). 
The launch of Progress MS-31 will mark the 184th flight of a Progress cargo  spacecraft, the sixth launch of a Soyuz rocket in 2025, and the third flight  of the 2.1a variant this year. Russia also conducted two Angara launches in  March and June, for a total of eight flights this year thus far. 
 (Lead image: Falcon 9 streaks into the night sky over Florida. Credit: Julia  Bergeron for NSF) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: Gilmour Space to make debut, SpaceX plans east coast  doubleheader appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/06/launch-roundup-063025/
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