Launch Roundup: Starlink, NRO, and New Shepard missions scheduled
Date:
Mon, 15 Sep 2025 20:48:47 +0000
Description:
Another busy week of launches has arrived, with SpaceX dominating the launch  manifest with four The post Launch Roundup: Starlink, NRO, and New Shepard  missions scheduled appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
Another busy week of launches has arrived, with SpaceX dominating the launch  manifest with four missions scheduled for the week. Three of these missions  will see new batches of Starlink internet satellites launched into the  companys Starlink constellation, with the fourth mission launching a payload  for the National Reconnaissance Office. 
Blue Origin looks to finally launch its uncrewed NS-35 mission on New Shepard  on Thursday after several delays due to issues with vehicle systems. New  Shepard will launch over 40 experiments and research payloads into space, as  well as thousands of postcards. 
 
 Chang Zheng 2C/YZ-1S | Unknown Payload 
A Chinese Chang Zheng 2C (CZ-2C) with the optional YZ-1S upper stage is  scheduled to launch from Site 9401 at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on  Tuesday, Sept. 16, at 01:05 UTC. The payload being launched is currently  unknown, but regulatory notices indicate that the CZ-2C will fly on a  southeast trajectory out of Jiuquan. 
The CZ-2C/YZ-1S is a three-stage, 38.83 m tall rocket that utilizes highly  toxic nitrogen tetroxide and unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine propellants. 
This mission will mark the 83rd launch of a CZ-2C and 2nd of 2025. Falcon 9  lifts off from pad SLC-4E at Vandenberg. (Credit: SpaceX) 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 17-12 
The first of three Starlink missions to launch on Falcon 9 this week is  Starlink Group 17-12. Scheduled to launch on Wednesday, Sept. 15, at 8:41 AM  PDT (15:41 UTC) from Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) at the Vandenberg  Space Force Base (VSFB) in California, this mission will see a new batch of 
24 Starlink v2 Mini satellites be deployed into the Group 17 shell. 
Falcon 9 will fly on a southwestern trajectory out of Vandenberg to place the  satellites in a low-Earth orbit (LEO) inclined 97 degrees. This will be the  11th mission to fly into the Group 17 shell, which has been exclusively  launched from SLC-4E. 
The booster supporting this mission is B1088, flying for the 10th time. It  previously supported the NROL-126, Transporter 12, SPHEREx & PUNCH, NROL-57,  and five Starlink missions (Groups 11-13, 15-4, 15-8, 15-7, and 17-5). After  liftoff and stage separation, B1088 will reenter Earths atmosphere and land 
on SpaceXs droneship Of Course I Still Love You, which will be stationed  downrange in the Pacific Ocean. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 10-61 
The weeks second Starlink mission, Starlink Group 10-61, is scheduled to  launch at 5:30 AM EDT (09:30 UTC) on Thursday, Sept. 18, from Space Launch  Complex 40 (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS) in  Florida. Falcon 9 will launch 28 Starlink v2 Mini satellites into the  constellations Group 10 shell, which is in a 53.16-degree inclination LEO. 
After flying the second stage and its payload on a northeastern trajectory 
out of the Cape, Falcon booster B1092 will land on SpaceXs droneship Just 
Read The Instructions droneship in the Atlantic Ocean. B1092 will be flying  for the seventh time, after supporting the NROL-69, CRS-32, GPS III SV08,  USSF-36, and two Starlink missions (Groups 12-13 and 10-34). 
 New Shepard | NS-35 
Blue Origin is looking to finally launch its uncrewed NS-35 New Shepard  mission on Thursday, Sept. 18, at 8:00 AM CDT (13:00 UTC) from Launch Site 
One at the companys launch facility in West Texas. This comes after several  delays due to issues with the boosters avionics systems. NS-35s initial 
launch date was Aug. 23. 
New Shepard will fly more than 40 scientific and research payloads briefly  beyond the Karman line before returning to Earth. NASAs TechRise Student  Challenge is providing 24 of the missions payloads, with the Johns Hopkins  Applied Physics Laboratory, Oklahoma State University, University of Florida,  Carthage College, University of Central Florida, Teledyne, Space Lab  Technologies, and Teachers in Space supplying other payloads. Thousands of  postcards will also be flown for Blue Origins nonprofit Club for the Future.  New Shepard NS-35 is targeting liftoff on Thursday, Sept. 18. The uncrewed  payload mission will fly more than 40 scientific and research payloads to  space. The launch window opens at 8:00 AM CDT / 1300 UTC. Live webcast starts  15 minutes before liftoff at 
https://t.co/TRUdJLGeBb .  pic.twitter.com/y06itp3zv0 
 Blue Origin (@blueorigin) September 14, 2025 
 
New Shepard is a 19.2 m tall, 3.8 m diameter two-stage suborbital rocket that  utilizes liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen as propellants. The first stage, a  liquid-fueled booster, features a single BE-3 engine that produces 490 kN of  thrust. Following main engine cut off and the separation of the first and  second stages, the booster reenters Earths atmosphere and propulsively lands  at a concrete landing pad at the West Texas facility. The second stage, a  capsule, is capable of flying both cargo and crew. After experiencing  microgravity for approximately three minutes, the capsule returns to Earth  under parachutes and softly touches down in the Texas desert using retro  thrusters. 
The booster supporting this mission is NS5, the newest New Shepard booster.  NS5 will be making its fifth flight on NS-35 after an 81-day turnaround. The  capsule flying on NS-35 is the RSS H. G. Wells , which will be making its 
12th flight into space. The RSS H. G. Wells first flew in December 2017, and  is Blue Origins dedicated payload capsule. 
This mission will be Blue Origins eighth mission of 2025 and New Shepards 
35th mission overall. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 10-27 
Scheduled to launch from SLC-40 at the CCSFS on Sunday, Sept. 21, at 5:20 AM  EDT (09:20 UTC) is the Starlink Group 10-27 mission. Falcon 9 will launch 28  Starlink v2 Mini satellites northeast out of the Cape into a 53.16-degree  inclination LEO. 
The booster supporting this mission is B1085, flying for the 11th time. After  stage separation, the booster will land atop one of SpaceXs two east coast  droneships, A Shortfall of Gravitas, which will be stationed around 600 km  downrange in the Atlantic Ocean. 
B1085 has previously supported the launches of the Crew-9, GPS III SV07, Blue  Ghost Mission 1, Fram2, SXM-10, and MTG-S1/Sentinel-4A missions, as well as  four Starlink missions (Groups 10-5, 6-77, 6-93, and 10-20). 
 Falcon 9 | NROL-48 
SpaceXs final mission and first customer mission for the week is the NROL-48  mission for the National Reconnaissance Office. Launching from SLC-4E at 
VSFB, liftoff is scheduled for 10:37 AM PDT (17:37 UTC) on Sunday, Sept. 21.  Falcon 9 will fly the payload, a batch of Starshield satellites developed by  SpaceX for government and military use, southeast out of Vandenberg into an  orbit inclined 70 degrees. 
 
Falcon booster B1081 will fly for the 18th time on this mission after a 
30-day turnaround. After its initial ascent, the booster will perform a  return-to-launch-site landing at SpaceXs Landing Zone 4 (LZ-4), which is  located adjacent to SLC-4E at Vandenberg. This booster began its service on  the east coast, launching from both SLC-40 and Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A),  before being moved to the west coast in March 2024. 
B1081 has previously supported the launches of the Crew-7, CRS-29, PACE,  Transporter 10, EarthCARE, NROL-186, Transporter 13, and TRACERS missions,  along with nine Starlink missions (Groups 6-34, 8-1, 9-5, 9-8, 9-10, 9-14,  15-3, 15-6, and 17-6). 
This mission will mark SpaceXs 120th Falcon 9 mission of 2025 and 538th 
Falcon 9 mission overall. 
 (Lead image: Falcon 9 launches from Florida. Credit: Julia Bergeon for NSF) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: Starlink, NRO, and New Shepard missions scheduled  appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/09/launch-roundup-091525/
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