Lift-off for
Electron
’s 65
th
launch. Source (All Images) | Rocket Lab
Throughout May 2025,
Rocket Lab USA Inc.
(Long Beach, Calif., U.S.) has made numerous strides in scheduled rocket launches for customers and building partnerships. The end-to-end space company delivers launch services, spacecraft, satellite components and on-orbit management. Rocket Lab’s reusable launch vehicles —
Neutron
and
Electron
— as well as satellite bus structural panels and assemblies, primary structures, solar panel substrates and tanks are supported by flight-proven carbon fiber composites.
U.S. Air Force Research Laborary (AFRL)
. On
May 8
, Rocket Labs announced the launch of
Neutron
for the U.S. AFRL for a Rocket Cargo mission that is scheduled for a return-to-Earth launch no earlier than 2026.
The launch contract will see
Neutron
execute a Rocket Cargo survivability experiment under the AFRL Rocket Experimentation for Global Agile Logistics (REGAL) solicitation, an effort by the Department of Defense to create a rocket-based point-to-point transportation system to quickly and rapidly deliver cargo around the world with commercial launch providers. AFRL’s experiment will be launched by
Neutron
and re-enter Earth’s atmosphere, in a demonstration of re-entry capability for future REGAL missions.
NASA
. The company was selected by NASA (Washington, D.C., U.S.) on
May 14
to launch its Aspera mission, an astrophysics science mission designed to study the formation and evolution of galaxies and provide new insights into how the universe works.
Rocket Lab will launch the Aspera spacecraft on
Electron
from Rocket Lab Launch Complex 1 no earlier than Q1 2026. Through the use of a telescope to study ultraviolet light, Aspera will examine hot gas in the space between galaxies, called the intergalactic medium, that is thought to contribute to the birth of stars and planets. Aspera will be the first NASA astrophysics mission to gather and map these ultraviolet light signatures.
Aspera joins the list of NASA science missions awarded to Rocket Lab including the CAPSTONE mission launched to the Moon by Electron and operated by Rocket Lab’s
Lunar Photon
spacecraft; NASA’s hurricane monitoring TROPICS mission launched across two
Electron
launches in May 2023; the agency’s PREFIRE climate change-focused mission studying melting ice caps in the Antarctic; and other small satellite science and technology missions launched on
Electron
since 2018.
Rocket Lab composites capabilities.
Institute for Q-shu Pioneers of Space Inc. (iQPS)
. On May 17, Rocket Labs launched its third mission with Japanese customer iQPS (Fukoaka). “The Sea God Sees” mission successfully launched on
Electron
from Rocket Lab Launch Complex 1 in Mahia, New Zealand, carrying iQPS’ QPS-SAR-10, a synthetic aperture radar (SAR) Earth-imaging satellite, to a 575-kilometer low Earth orbit, where it was deployed as part of iQPS’ growing constellation. The mission was launched just weeks’ after Rocket Lab’s previous launch for iQPS was deployed on March 15.
This mission in particular was the third overall launch for iQPS and the second in a multilaunch contract to launch eight missions for the company in 2025 and 2026. Four more launches are scheduled for launch in 2025, with the remaining two scheduled for 2026. Rocket Lab’s next mission for iQPS is scheduled to launch from no earlier than June 2025.
BlackSky
. On
May 22
, Rocket Lab reported that its next scheduled mission for real-time space-based intelligence company BlackSky (Herndon, Va., U.S.) would cement
Electron
as the most prolific launcher for BlackSky’s constellation to date. The mission, “Full Stream Ahead,” is the second in a series of four
Electron
launches booked by BlackSky to deploy its Gen-3 satellites to orbit this year, and the 10th overall launch for the company.
The launch successfully took place on
June 3
from Mahia, New Zealand, deploying the Gen-3 satellite to a 470-kilometer circular Earth orbit. It is the seventh
Electron
mission of 2025, its 65
th
launch overall and will bring the total number of satellites delivered to space by Rocket Lab to 226.