Launch Roundup: Cygnus XL and Progress to fly cargo missions to ISS
Date:
Mon, 08 Sep 2025 22:15:58 +0000
Description:
Two cargo resupply missions are set to launch to the International Space  Station this week. The post Launch Roundup: Cygnus XL and Progress to fly  cargo missions to ISS appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
Two cargo resupply missions are set to launch to the International Space  Station this week. A Russian Soyuz will launch the Progress MS-32 spacecraft,  followed a few days later by a Falcon 9 carrying Northrop Grummans new Cygnus  XL vehicle. 
In addition to Cygnus XL, Falcon 9 will launch one Starlink mission and two  customer missions. Russia and China are also expected to launch satellite  missions during the week. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Nusantara Lima 
This weeks first customer Falcon 9 launch is scheduled for Monday, Sept. 8, 
at 8:02 PM EDT (Tuesday, 00:02 UTC). The Nusantara Lima mission will place an  Indonesian high-throughput telecommunications satellite into geostationary  transfer orbit. The satellite is being launched to replace an earlier version  that failed to reach the required orbit following launch aboard a Chinese  Chang Zheng 3B rocket in 2020. 
Falcon 9 booster B1078 will launch from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at  Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS) in Florida and will fly due east  before landing atop the A Shortfall of Gravitas droneship. 
 
B1078 will be flying for the 23rd time, having previously supported the  Crew-6, O3b mPower 3 & 4, Starlink Group 6-4, Starlink Group 6-8, Starlink  Group 6-16, Starlink Group 6-31, USSF-124, Starlink Group 6-46, Starlink 
Group 6-53, Starlink Group 6-60, Starlink Group 10.2, Starlink Group 10-6,  Bluebird-1, Starlink Group 10-13, Starlink Group 6-76, Starlink Group 12-6,  Starlink Group 12-9, Starlink Group 12-16, Starlink Group 6-72, Starlink 
Group 6-84, Starlink Group 12-26, and Starlink Group 10-26 missions. The  boosters first flight was on March 2, 2023. 
Falcon 9 is a 3.9 m diameter, 70 m tall two-stage rocket. Nine Merlin 1D  engines power the first stage booster, while the second stage utilizes a  single vacuum-optimized Merlin engine. Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy are the 
first and only reusable orbital rockets in service today, with one Falcon  booster having flown 30 flights. The two payload fairings are also recovered  and reused after flight. 
 Chang Zheng 7A | Unknown Payload 
A Chang Zheng 7A (CZ-7A) will launch on Tuesday, Sept. 9, at 02:00 UTC from  LC-201 at Wenchang Space Launch Site in Hainan, China. The CZ-7A is expected  to fly a currently unknown payload due east out of Wenchang. 
Standing 58 m tall, the CZ-7A has three stages, with the first stage 
featuring four strap-on boosters. The first two stages and the four boosters  all use liquid oxygen (LOX) and RP-1 propellants, while the third stage burns  liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen. This will be the fourth CZ-7A flight of  2025, and the 12th flight of the CZ-7A variant since its debut in 2020. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Tranche 1 Transport Layer B 
SpaceX will launch the Tranche 1 Transport Layer B mission on Wednesday, 
Sept. 10, at 4:59 AM PDT (11:58 UTC) from Space Launch Complex (SLC-4E) at  Vandenberg Space Force Base (VSFB) in California. 
The customer for this mission is the Space Development Agency (SDA), a  direct-reporting unit of the U.S. Space Force. This mission serves as the  first of six Tranche 1 Transport Layer missions to launch on a Falcon 9 from  Vandenberg. Falcon 9 will carry 21 satellites on a due south trajectory  towards a polar orbit. SDAs Transport Layer will provide assured, resilient,  low-latency military data and connectivity worldwide to a full range of  warfighter platforms. 
Following liftoff, the booster, B1093, will land atop the west coast 
droneship Of Course I Still Love You , which will be stationed downrange in  the Pacific Ocean. B1093 will be making its sixth flight on this mission,  having previously flown five Starlink missions into the Group 11, 15, and 17  shells. 
 Soyuz 2.1a | Progress MS-32 
On Thursday, Sept. 11, at 15:54 UTC, a Russian cargo resupply mission,  Progress MS-32, will launch to the International Space Station (ISS) from 
Site 31/6 at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. A Progress cargo spacecraft  will launch atop a Soyuz 2.1a rocket, flying northeast to deliver 7,280 kg of  cargo, including food, water, and science experiments, to the orbiting  laboratory. 
The Soyuz-2.1a is one of three active variants in the Soyuz family of 
rockets. The first stage consists of four liquid-fueled boosters, which are  mounted radially around a central core, which makes up the second stage of 
the rocket. A previous Roscosmos Progress cargo spacecraft approaches the  International Space Station on July 5, 2025, (Credit: NASA) 
Each of the four boosters is powered by an RD-107A engine, burning RG-1  propellant  a highly-refined form of kerosene similar to RP-1  and liquid  oxygen. Each RD-107A is equipped with two smaller vernier engines to assist 
in controlling the rockets flight. 
The center core, designated Blok-A, is the second stage of the rocket. It  utilizes a single RD-108A engine, derived from the RD-107A, with four vernier  engines instead of the two. A single RD-0110 engine powers the third stage. 
 Soyuz 2.1b | Glonass-K1 18L 
A second Soyuz will launch on Saturday, Sept. 13, at 02:30 UTC, from the  Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Russia. This mission will utilize the more powerful  Soyuz 2.1b with the Fregat-M upper stage to launch a Glosnass-K satellite  navigation system payload due east into medium-Earth orbit. 
Soyuz 2.1b features a more powerful third stage than Soyuz 2.1a. Four RD-107A  engines power Soyuz 2.1b on the first stage (arranged around the second, core  stage), a single RD-108A engine on the core stage, and an RD-0124 engine on  the third stage. Each stage uses liquid oxygen and liquid kerosene (RP-1) as  propellants. 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 17-10 
The Starlink Group 17-10 mission will launch on Saturday, Sept. 13, at 8:41 
AM PDT (15:41 UTC) from SLC-4E at VSFB in California. Falcon 9 will fly due  south to place the payload into a polar Sun-synchronous orbit. 
Following the mission, the currently unannounced booster will land atop  SpaceXs east coast droneship Of Course I Still Love You , which will be  stationed downrange in the Pacific Ocean. 
 
 Falcon 9 | CRS NG-23 
A second cargo resupply mission to the ISS will launch on Sunday, Sept. 14, 
at 8:11:49 PM EDT (22:11:49 UTC). A SpaceX Falcon 9 will launch the first  Northrop Grumman Cygnus XL from SLC-40 at CCSFS. 
Cygnus XL is being flown to replace the previous Cygnus spacecraft  MS-22   which was damaged in transit from Northrop Grummans facilities to the Kennedy  Space Center. The new Cygnus XL is a stretched version of the previous model,  allowing for more volume and up to 1,300 kg of additional mass to be  transported to the ISS. Built in France and Italy by Thales Alenia Space, the  Cygnus XL flying on this mission will be named in honour of naval aviator and  astronaut William Willie C. McCool. 
The booster supporting this mission will be B1094, making its fourth flight.  After flying northeast, the booster will separate from the second stage and  perform a return-to-launch-site landing at Landing Zone 2 (LZ-2). B1094 first  flew on April 29, 2025, supporting Starlink Group 12-10, and has since  supported the Axiom Mission 4 and Crew-11 missions. 
 (Lead image: Falcon 9 launches from Florida. Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: Cygnus XL and Progress to fly cargo missions to ISS  appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/09/launch-roundup-090825/
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