Launch Roundup: Kuiper, Starlink, IMAP headline launch manifest
Date:
Mon, 22 Sep 2025 21:04:34 +0000
Description:
A busy slate of launches is planned for the last full week of September,  including The post Launch Roundup: Kuiper, Starlink, IMAP headline launch  manifest appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
A busy slate of launches is planned for the last full week of September,  including flights for two major low-Earth orbit broadband constellations, as  well as a NASA science mission. China and Rocket Lab are also planning  flights, with Electron set to fly two suborbital hypersonic research missions  from Wallops Island, Virginia. 
The United Launch Alliance (ULA) is planning to fly an Atlas V 551 on the  KA-03 mission for the Amazon Kuiper constellation, while SpaceX is preparing  to fly three Falcon 9 Starlink missions. 
 
One of the Starlink flights will be launched from the Cape Canaveral Space  Force Station (CCSFS), while two others will be launched from Vandenberg 
Space Force Base (VSFB). One Chinese mission will launch from an offshore  platform in the Yellow Sea with another from Jiuquan. Electron launches from  Wallops. (Credit: Rocket Lab) 
 Electron | JENNA 
The first of two HASTE hypersonic research missions scheduled to fly this  month is codenamed JENNA and will fly from Launch Complex 2 (LC-2) at the  Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. Launch is scheduled for Monday, Sept. 
22, at 7:45 PM EDT (02:45 UTC), with Electron flying on an eastward 
trajectory over the Atlantic. 
Although the Electron is an orbital-class satellite launcher, this flight,  along with the upcoming JAKE 4 mission, will be suborbital. These flights are  intended for military hypersonic research payloads, and little is known about  them. 
The JENNA launch will be the 13th Electron launch of 2025 and the first since  the Live, Laugh, Launch mission from New Zealand on Aug. 23. Launch of a  Jielong-3. (Credit: CNSA) 
 Jielong 3 Y8 | Jili 06 A-K 
Chinarocket, the launch provider subsidiary of the China Academy of Launch  Vehicle Technology, plans to launch a Jielong 3 rocket from the Oriental  Spaceport Launch Ship (Area 1) platform in the Yellow Sea off the Chinese  coast. The flight is scheduled for Tuesday, Sept. 23, at 08:15 UTC. 
The Jielong 3 rocket, capable of flying up to 1,600 kg to a 500 km altitude,  circular Sun-synchronous orbit (SSO), features four solid-fueled stages and  uses the same motors as the CAS Space Zhongke-1 (Kinetica-1) rocket. 
Jielong 3 will fly on a southeast trajectory and carry the Jili (Geely)  Constellation 06 satellites A through K. The Geely low-Earth orbit (LEO)  communications satellite constellation is designed to offer coverage for the  Internet of Things (IoT), which is particularly useful to the company as it 
is a leading Chinese automaker. 
Constellation 06 refers to the sixth orbital plane for Geelys IoT satellite  service. Other Geely satellites have been launched by the Jielong 3, 
including a launch for the fourth orbital plane last month. The Aug. 9 launch  also took place from the launch platform in the Yellow Sea, and the Jielong 3  Y8 launch this week will be the fourth launch of 2025 for the rocket. Artists  impression of the IMAP spacecraft in orbit. (Credit: NASA/Princeton  University/Patrick McPike) 
 Falcon 9 | IMAP 
The NASA Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP), along with  secondary payloads, is scheduled to launch aboard a Falcon 9 on Wednesday,  Sept. 24, from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at the Kennedy Space Center in  Florida. Launch is set for 7:30 AM EDT (11:30 UTC) during an instantaneous  launch window. 
Falcon booster B1096-2, which started its career with the KF-01 mission for  Amazons Kuiper constellation, will take an eastward trajectory from LC-39A.  After stage separation, the booster will reenter Earths atmosphere and land  atop SpaceXs Just Read the Instructions droneship in the Atlantic. 
The second stage will place IMAP, Space Weather Follow-On-Lagrange 1  (SWFO-L1), and the Carruthers Geocorona Observatory on a trajectory toward 
the gravitationally stable L1 Lagrange point, located between the Earth and  the Sun. Artists impression of SWFO-L1 in orbit. (Credit: BAE Systems) 
The IMAP spacecraft will study the boundary between the heliosphere and  interstellar space, a boundary crossed in the last decade by the Voyager 1 
and 2 spacecraft after their exploration of the outer planets in the 1970s 
and 1980s. 
The 900 kg spacecraft, equipped with 10 instruments, will also study charged  particles and solar wind emitted by the Sun. IMAP will be able to provide  approximately 30 minutes of warning to spacecraft and astronauts of hazardous  solar radiation events. 
SWFO-L1, a 377 kg spacecraft operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric  Administration (NOAA), is the first of two rideshare payloads to fly with 
IMAP to L1. SWFO-L1 was designed to ensure uninterrupted space weather  monitoring from L1, as existing missions such as SOHO, ACE, and DSCOVR have  surpassed their spacecraft design life. The spacecrafts four instruments will  keep a constant watch on the Sun and its activity. Rendering of the 
Carruthers Geocorona Observatory in space. (Credit: NASAs Scientific  Visualization Studio  eMITS/Beth Anthony) 
Unlike IMAP and SWFO-L1, the Carruthers Geocorona Observatorys pair of  instruments will be turned toward the Earth-Moon system. The 200 kg  spacecraft, formerly known as the Global Lyman-alpha Imagers of the Dynamic  Exosphere, will use two ultraviolet cameras to observe the Earths exosphere  and investigate how it responds to solar storms. 
This launch will be the 121st Falcon 9 launch of 2025, as SpaceX continues to  work toward surpassing 2024s record of 132 Falcon 9 flights. 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 10-15 
SpaceXs first Starlink mission of the week is planned for Thursday, Sept. 25,  at 4:36 AM EDT (08:36 UTC) from Space Launch Complex-40 (SLC-40) at the CCSFS  in Florida. The four-hour launch window closes at 8:36 AM EDT (12:36 UTC). 
B1080-22 will fly on a northeast trajectory to send 28 Starlink v2 Mini  satellites to LEO, with the veteran booster landing on A Shortfall of 
Gravitas in the Atlantic after its ascent. B1080 started its career with the  crewed Axiom-2 mission in May 2023 and has also flown the Euclid, Axiom-3,  CRS-30, Astra 1P/SES-24, CRS NG-21, and 15 Starlink missions. 
As of Sept. 19, 2025, a total of 9,760 satellites have been launched into the  Starlink constellation over the last seven years, with 7,430 now in their  operational orbits. This flight will be the 122nd Falcon 9 launch of 2025.  Atlas V launches with the KA-01 mission for Project Kuiper. (Credit: Max 
Evans for NSF) 
 Atlas V 551 | Kuiper KA-03 
The United Launch Alliance (ULA) has scheduled its third Atlas V flight of 
the year for Thursday, Sept. 25, at 8:09 AM EDT (12:09 UTC) from Space Launch  Complex-41 (SLC-41) at CCSFS. The short launch window extends until 8:38 AM  EDT (12:38 UTC). 
This Atlas V launch, the second of the day from CCSFS if schedules hold, will  fly 27 Amazon Kuiper broadband satellites to LEO. The Atlas V to be used for  this flight  and all other non-Starliner Atlas launches until the vehicles  retirement  is the 551 configuration with five solid rocket boosters, a  five-meter fairing, and one RL-10 engine on the Centaur upper stage. The 551  is the most powerful variant of the Atlas V. 
Amazon is racing to launch as many Kuiper satellites as possible before a 
July 2026 deadline, aiming to have at least half of its constellation,  comprising 3,236 total satellites, in orbit. Kuiper is designed to compete  with SpaceXs Starlink in providing broadband access to the entire world,  including areas with no or limited connectivity. 
The KA-03 mission will be followed by 12 more Atlas V missions using the 551  or N22 configurations. ULA is moving toward exclusively flying the Vulcan  rocket as the successor to its Delta and Atlas rocket families. Starlink  satellites are released during the Starlink Group 15-5 mission. (Credit:  SpaceX) 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 17-11 
The second Starlink flight of the week is also scheduled for Thursday, Sept.  25. Unlike Starlink Group 10-15, Starlink Group 17-11 is set to launch from  Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) at VSFB in California, with a T0  scheduled for 6:57 PM PDT (01:57 UTC Friday, Sept. 26). The four-hour launch  window lasts until 10:57 PM PDT (05:57 UTC Friday, Sept. 26). 
Booster B1063-28 will take a southerly trajectory and land atop SpaceXs west  coast droneship, Of Course I Still Love You, in the Pacific. The second stage  will carry 24 Starlink v2 Mini satellites to LEO. 
B1063s career started with the Sentinel 6A-Michael Freilich mission, with the  booster also flying the DART, Transporter 7, Iridium-9/OneWeb #19, Tranche 
0B, NROL-113, NROL-167, NROL-149, NAOS, and 18 Starlink missions before  Starlink Group 17-11. 
This launch will be the 123rd Falcon 9 flight of 2025. CZ-2D launches from 
the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center (Credit: ADA Space) 
 Chang Zheng 2D | Unknown Payload 
China is planning to fly a Chang Zheng 2D (CZ-2D) on Friday, Sept. 26, at  17:20 UTC from Site 9401 at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the  northwestern province of Inner Mongolia. The rocket will take a southward  trajectory as per regulatory notices. 
Although the payload is not yet known, the trajectory hints at a polar orbit,  possibly an SSO, which allows for a spacecraft to pass a given point on Earth  at the same local time every day. Many Earth observation, science, weather,  and surveillance satellites typically use these orbits. The CZ-2D is capable  of launching up to 1,300 kg to a SSO. 
The CZ-2D rocket is based on ICBM technology, notably using storable but  highly toxic hypergolic fuels. This flight is the sixth CZ-2D flight of 2025.  Starlink satellites are released during Starlink Group 15-5, which also  launched from SLC-4E on May 16. (Credit: SpaceX) 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink 11-20 
The third Starlink launch of this week is set for Sunday, Sept. 28, from  SLC-4E at VSFB. Launch is scheduled for 4:32 PM PDT (23:32 UTC) at the start  of a four-hour window that ends at 8:32 PM PDT (03:32 UTC on Monday, Sept.  29). 
The booster, which is not yet known, will fly on a southeast trajectory 
before landing on Of Course I Still Love You in the Pacific. The second stage  will take a batch of Starlink v2 Mini satellites into orbit. 
This launch will serve as the 124th Falcon 9 launch of 2025. 
 Electron | JAKE 4 
The second HASTE hypersonic research flight, using a modified version of  Rocket Labs Electron, is scheduled for Monday, Sept. 29, at 7:45 PM EDT 
(02:45 UTC Tuesday, Sept. 30) from LC-2 at the Wallops Flight Facility in  Virginia. 
 
This flight will employ an eastward suborbital trajectory, with the payload  presumably concluding its flight over the Atlantic. Little is known about the  payloads used by HASTE flights, but the U.S. Armed Forces is intensively  researching and developing hypersonic aircraft and missiles for future combat  situations. 
JAKE 4 was initially scheduled to fly on July 11, but was delayed multiple  times over the last two months. This flight will be the 14th Electron launch  of 2025, as Rocket Lab not only works to increase Electrons launch cadence 
but also attempts to finish preparations for the first flight of its upcoming  partially reusable medium-lift Neutron rocket. 
 (Lead image: Falcon 9 launches from Florida. Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: Kuiper, Starlink, IMAP headline launch manifest  appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/09/launch-roundup-092225/
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