Launch Roundup: China to launch crew to Tiangong, India to launch new naval  satellite
Date:
Mon, 27 Oct 2025 22:59:23 +0000
Description:
Six missions comprise the worldwide launch manifest this week, including a  crewed launch from China The post Launch Roundup: China to launch crew to  Tiangong, India to launch new naval satellite appeared first on  NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
Six missions comprise the worldwide launch manifest this week, including a  crewed launch from China and a new naval satellite for the Indian Navy. 
SpaceX is set to kick off the week with three back-to-back Starlink missions  from its pads in California and Florida. 
Later in the week, China will launch the crewed Shenzhou 21 mission to the  Tiangong space station with three new taikonauts onboard. On Sunday, SpaceX  plans to launch a rideshare Bandwagon mission before India launches its LVM-3  rocket and GSAT-7R satellite to geostationary transfer orbit. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 11-21 
The first of three Starlink missions this week, Starlink Group 11-21, is  scheduled to launch on Monday, Oct. 27, at 5:10 PM PDT (00:10 UTC on Tuesday,  Oct. 28). Falcon 9, carrying a batch of 28 Starlink v2 Mini satellites, will  liftoff from Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) at the Vandenberg Space  Force Base in California. 
The booster supporting this mission is B1082, launching for its 17th time  after a 32-day turnaround. B1082 previously flew the USSF-62, OneWeb #20, and  NROL-145 missions, as well as 13 Starlink missions. 
Following liftoff, ascent, and stage separation, B1082 will return to Earth  and land atop SpaceXs autonomous droneship Of Course I Still Love You, which  will be stationed downrange in the Pacific Ocean. Falcon 9 will fly on a  southeastern trajectory, ultimately deploying the satellites into a low-Earth  orbit (LEO) inclined 53.16 degrees. 
 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 10-37 
The Starlink Group 10-27 mission is scheduled to launch on Wednesday, Oct. 
29, at the opening of a four-hour window at 8:52 AM EDT (12:52 UTC) from 
Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station  (CCSFS) in Florida. Falcon 9 and its 29 Starlink v2 Mini satellites will fly  on a northeastern trajectory into the constellations Group 10 shell in LEO. 
Booster B1083 is set to fly for the 15th time after previously launching the  Crew-8, Polaris Dawn, CRS-31, Astranis: From One to Many, Nova C, IM-2, and  Dror-1 missions. It has also lofted eight Starlink missions. 
SpaceXs droneship Just Read the Instructions will be stationed downrange in  the Atlantic for B1083 to land on following launch. 
 Falcon 9 | Starlink Group 11-23 
The third and final scheduled Starlink mission of the week, Starlink Group  11-23, is set to launch from SLC-4E at Vandenberg on Thursday, Oct. 30, at  1:06 PM PDT (20:06 UTC). As with the earlier Group 11-21 mission, 28 Starlink  v2 Mini satellites will be launched into a 53.16-degree-inclination LEO. 
 
Falcon booster B1063 will support the mission, flying on its 29th mission  after a 32-day turnaround. The booster flew for the first time in November  2020, and of the 29 missions B1063 has flown, 19 are Starlink missions. 
B1063s non-Starlink missions include Sentinel-6A Michael Freilich, DART,  Transporter 7, Iridium-9 & OneWeb #19, Transport & Tracking Layer Tranche 0B,  NROL-113, NROL-167, NROL-149, and NAOS. 
After launch and stage separation, the booster will land atop Of Course I  Still Love You in the Pacific Ocean. 
 Chang Zheng 2F/G | Shenzhou 21 
Chinas Tiangong space station is set to receive three new taikonauts from the  Shenzhou 21 mission, which is scheduled to launch on Friday, Oct. 31, at 
15:44 UTC from Site 901 at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in China. The  three taikonauts and their Shenzhou capsule will launch atop a Chang Zheng  2F/G (CZ-2F/G). 
The three crew members launching on Shenzhou 21 are currently unknown,  although their selections were finalized in February. The names of the  taikonauts are expected to be released approximately 24 hours before launch.  Their Shenzhou spacecraft, whose design is closely based on Russias Soyuz,  will mass roughly 8,100 kg at launch. Shenzhou 21 rolls out for launch.  (Credit: Xinhua News) 
The CZ-2F/G, also known as the Long March 2F/G, is a human-rated two-stage  variant of the Chang Zheng 2E rocket. Standing 62 m tall and 3.35 m in  diameter, the CZ-2F/G utilizes four liquid-fueled boosters with YF-20B  engines, four YF-20B engines on the first stage, and one YF-24B engine on the  second stage. Both stages and the boosters use highly storable but toxic  nitrogen tetroxide (N2O4) and unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine (UDMH)  propellants. Since its first flight in 1999, the CZ-2F family has seen a 100%  success rate through 25 missions. 
This mission will mark the 16th Chinese human spaceflight mission and the 
10th crewed mission to Tiangong. Furthermore, Shenzhou 21 will mark the 26th  CZ-2F mission and the second CZ-2F/G mission of 2025. 
 Falcon 9 | Bandwagon-4 
The final Falcon 9 mission of the week is scheduled to be the rideshare  Bandwagon-4 mission, launching from SLC-40 at CCSFS in Florida. Liftoff is 
set near the start of an hour-long launch window at 1:09 AM EDT (05:09 UTC) 
on Sunday, Nov. 2. 
SpaceXs Bandwagon missions, along with Transporter missions, are a part of 
the companys SmallSat Rideshare Program, which enables satellite operators to  launch spacecraft on dedicated rideshare missions atop Falcon 9 for lower  prices. Bandwagon missions are specifically designed to allow rideshare  customers to deploy their payloads to mid-inclination orbits. As the name  suggests, this mission is the fourth Bandwagon mission, with the first  launching in April 2024. 
 
Neither the exact number of payloads nor a list of payloads has been 
released. Some confirmed payloads include a synthetic aperture radar (SAR)  satellite for South Koreas 425 Project, CevroSat-1 from Czechia, four Taurus  satellites, and more. Whats more, satellite deployment company Exolaunch is  set to deploy 13 payloads on Bandwagon-4. More details on payloads will 
likely be released as launch approaches. 
The booster supporting this mission is currently unknown. Following launch 
and stage separation, the booster will perform a return-to-launch-site 
landing and land atop a concrete pad at Landing Zone 2 (LZ-2) at CCSFS.This  touchdown could mark the final landing on this pad before SpaceX moves RTLS  recovery operations to new landing zones currently under construction at its  launch complexes. 
This mission will mark the 140th Falcon 9 mission of 2025, the 558th overall  Falcon 9 mission, and SpaceXs 585th mission of all time. 
 LVM-3 | CMS-03 
The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) is scheduled to launch the  CMS-03 mission atop its Launch Vehicle Mark-3 (LVM-3) rocket on Sunday, Nov.  2, at 10:30 UTC. LVM-3 will lift off from the Second Launch Pad at the Satish  Dhawan Space Centre in India on an eastern trajectory, deploying the 
satellite payload to a geostationary transfer orbit. LVM-3 launches the  Chandrayaan-3 mission in July 2023. (Credit: ISRO) 
The payload on this mission is the GSAT-7R satellite, specifically designed  for the Indian Navy as a replacement for the GSAT-7 Rukmini satellite that  launched in 2013. Massing 4,400 kg, GSAT-7R features many upgraded payloads  and capabilities, including more secure multi-band communications. The new  satellite will improve and strengthen the Indian Navys warfare capabilities  and operational reach across maritime domains. 
The LVM-3, previously known as the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle  Mark III (GSLV Mk III), is a medium-lift rocket designed to launch  communication satellites into geostationary orbit. Standing 43.43 m tall and  four meters in diameter, the three-stage rocket utilizes two strap-on solid  rocket boosters on the first stage, two Vikas engines on the second stage, 
and a single CE-20 engine on the third stage. The second stage Vikas engines  burn N2O4 and UDMH propellants, while the third stages CE-20 engine uses  liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen. 
All seven missions the LVM-3 has flown since 2014 have been successful. This  mission will mark the eighth LVM-3 mission, the first of 2025, and ISROs 
100th mission overall. Furthermore, this mission will be the 254th orbital  launch attempt worldwide in 2025. 
 (Lead image: Falcon 9 launches from Florida. Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF) 
 
The post Launch Roundup: China to launch crew to Tiangong, India to launch 
new naval satellite appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
======================================================================
Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/10/launch-roundup-102725/
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 (Linux/64)
 * Origin: tqwNet Science News (1337:1/100)