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Atlas V rocket launches its heaviest-ever payload, sending 29 Amazon internet satellites to orbit. By Mike Wall last updated 3 hours ago Liftoff of the LA-05 mission occurred at 1:46 a.m. ET on Saturday (April 4). A United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V rocket launched its heaviest-ever payload on Saturday morning (April 4). The Atlas V lifted off Saturday at 1:46 a.m. EDT (0546 GMT) from Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, carrying 29 satellites for the Amazon Leo broadband constellation to orbit. Together, those spacecraft weigh 18 tons, according to ULA. The Atlas V successfully deployed all 29 into their target orbit, according to ULA. United Launch Alliance advances @AmazonLeo constellation with successful Leo 5 launch. Atlas V precisely delivered 29 broadband satellites dedicated to connecting the world.https://t.co/kop0naHlrH pic.twitter.com/Y7XA0E732JApril 4, 2026 The Amazon Leo megaconstellation, previously known as Project Kuiper, will eventually consist of about 3,200 satellites in low Earth orbit. It's Amazon's answer to SpaceX's Starlink network, which beams internet service down from more than 10,000 satellites (and counting). Amazon Leo is still in its early stages; just 241 of the spacecraft have reached orbit to date over the course of nine launches (not counting a 2023 liftoff that sent up two prototype satellites). The Atlas V has now flown five of those operational missions. Three employed SpaceX's Falcon 9, and the other one used Arianespace's Ariane 6 heavy lifter. Saturday's launch, which Amazon called LA-05, was the first Atlas V mission to loft 29 Amazon Leo satellites; the others carried 27 of the spacecraft. Breaking space news, the latest updates on rocket launches, skywatching events and more!
NASA launches Artemis II in further step toward a Moon return. NASA launched Artemis II, its first crewed mission under the Artemis program, on Wednesday evening. The mission will test the Orion spacecraft's life support capabilities on live astronauts for the first time as the space agency prepares for its planned crewed expeditions to the Moon. The mission launched at 6:35 p.m. EDT from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. It was the second successful launch for the Boeing-built Space Launch System (SLS) heavy-lift rocket after the precursor Artemis I mission in 2022. Four astronauts are aboard for the mission: Christina Koch, Reid Wiseman, and Victor Glover of NASA and Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency. The spacecraft had a communications issue about 51 minutes into the flight, in which the ground support was not able to receive communications from the crew, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said in a post-launch press conference Wednesday evening. It was a temporary, partial loss of communications, in which the crew still recieved uplink from the ground, he said. The issue took place during a handover between NASA Tracking and Data Relay Satellite (TDRS) satellites. Communications have been restored and NASA is working the issue. SLS carried the Orion spacecraft, built by NASA and Lockheed Martin, on its way to a 10-day-long mission in the vicinity of the Moon. The crew will evaluate Orion's performance, test its radiation shelter, and practice emergency procedures. Throughout the mission, Orion will fly two elliptical orbits around the Earth to test its systems before heading into a 24-hour orbit around the Moon. The crew will take control of the craft for around two hours to gather data and experience for the upcoming Artemis III mission, according to NASA's reference guide for Artemis II. While boomeranging around the Moon, the astronauts will produce photographs and audio recordings of their observations and experiences for historical documentation and scientific analysis. They may become the first humans to see certain areas of the Moon's far side, depending on the time of the launch, according to NASA. After the mission's end, Orion will splash down in the Pacific Ocean and be retrieved. "Artemis II is the start of something bigger than any one mission. It marks our return to the Moon, not just to visit, but to eventually stay on our Moon Base, and lays the foundation for the next giant leaps ahead," NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said in a statement. Outside of the Artemis mission, SLS is also carrying cubesats developed by Argentina, Germany, South Korea, and Saudi Arabia's space agencies. SLS will release the four cubesats in a High-Earth Orbit, where they will maneuver into their intended orbits and begin collecting data for their respective missions. NASA is working with Amentum for ground, prelaunch, launch, and recovery operations. Northrop Grumman, the lead contractor for boosters, built the twin solid rocket boosters on SLS alongside NASA engineers. L3Harris Technologies built four RS-25 engines for the launch platform. Telodyne Brown Engineering developed SLS' launch vehicle stage adapter and United Launch Alliance collaborated with Boeing to create its interim cryogenic propulsion stages. NASA will air 24/7 mission coverage on its YouTube channel. "Today, people around the world share this generation's Moon moment and celebrate the Artemis II crew and the extraordinary team supporting them. All of us at Space Foundation congratulate the crew, the entire Artemis team, and the remarkable people whose dedication has once again made history and brought humanity one step closer to the Moon," Space Foundation CEO Heather Pringle said in a statement applauding the mission.
United Launch Alliance tapped to provide replacement Artemis stages after revamp. Richard Tribou, Orlando Sentinel on Mar 10, 2026 Subscribe. NASA moved quickly to tap United Launch Alliance to help fill in the blank space the agency created when it decided to alter its Artemis program's future launches. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman had announced Feb. 27 that instead of developing a larger version of the Space Launch System rocket, which would been called the Block 1B for the fourth and fifth flights of the agency's moon program, it was opting to stick with what he called "essentially a near block one configuration." That means that while it would no longer support the Exploration Upper Stage that was being manufactured by Boeing, "due to eroding cost and schedule delays NASA now requires an alternate upper stage," the agency stated. Instead, the agency posted a task order Friday stating that it planned to award ULA a contract to supply versions of its Centaur V upper stage, which is also used on that company's new Vulcan rockets. The Centaur V is similar to the upper stage being used on Artemis I, III and III. That stage is called the interim cryogenic propulsion stage, which was also provided by ULA. The company cannot produce more, however, as the ICPS was related to the now-retired Delta IV rocket. NASA, though, cited ULA as the best chance to develop its Centaur V in time for Artemis IV and V's 2028 launch target date. For ULA's part, the company had posted it "looks forward to continuing supporting NASA and our country's goal to reestablish human presence on the moon" on its social media accounts following Isaacman's announcement of Artemis' program changes. Along with the task order, which is to be officially awarded later this year, NASA posted a justification to not compete the contract, citing the sped-up timelines needed for the program, which was facing delays of more than three years between missions. "Award to any source other than ULA would result in a substantial duplication of cost to the government that is not expected to be recovered through competition and would result in unacceptable schedule delays in fulfilling the agency's requirements," the justification reads. While Artemis II, which could fly as soon as April, is a lunar fly-by mission, NASA shifted plans to make Artemis III fly as soon as mid-2027 on a near-Earth mission to test out docking with lunar landers being created by SpaceX and Blue Origin. Aiming for as quick as 10-month turnaround between missions, Artemis IV would then come as soon as early 2028, looking to return humans to the lunar surface for the first time since the end of the Apollo program in 1972. Artemis V could also fly as soon as late 2028. The task order seeks delivery of the Centaur V upper stages at least nine months before launch, meaning the first would need to be in hand a little more than a year from now and the second by around the end of 2027. The contract also calls from ULA to provide a third spare Centaur V. For ULA, the news is a bit of a boon for what has been a problematic year so far with its normal launch business. The company has managed just one launch this year, and the fourth ever of its Vulcan rocket, but suffered another burned-off piece of one of its boosters on launch. The good news is that the Vulcan was able to compensate for the booster and make it to space. And the Centaur V on the mission performed just as the three previous Vulcan launches, getting its payloads to the proper destination without any issue. The new task order's value was not published, but the company received $954.4 million for the hardware it provided for the first three missions, according to a 2022 audit from NASA's Office of the Inspector General. Boeing isn't out of the money with the new direction, though, as it still supplies the SLS core stage and will need to focus on getting those delivered in time as well. In addition, Boeing remains a 50% stakeholder with Lockheed Martin in ULA, which was created in 2006 out of those two companies' Atlas and Delta rocket programs. The big difference between the EUS and the Centaur V is the number of engines. EUS was to use four RL-10 engines, provided by L3Harris. The Centaur V has only two. The ICPS for Artemis I, II and III, use only one RL-10. L3Harris had already delivered the RL-10s for the EUS, but Kristin Houston, the company's president of its space propulsion & power systems program, said the change is welcome, and with an active RL-10 production line based in West Palm Beach, the company will have no problem meeting NASA's needs. "We are just really excited to see the new plan, the new Artemis overall architecture plan, especially the accelerated cadence," she said. "Getting launched at least once a year on a routine basis is going to help us get to the moon faster." (C) 2026 Orlando Sentinel. Visit at orlandosentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
NASA selects Vulcan Centaur 5 as it fine tunes its space launch system for Artemis missions. NASA has selected Centaur 5 from United Launch Alliance to power two crewed Artemis program missions planned for 2028. WASHINGTON - NASA has selected United Launch Alliance's Centaur 5 as the upper stage for its Space Launch System rocket for two crewed missions planned for 2028. Centaur 5 was developed as the upper stage for United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rocket, which has flown four times since its debut in January 2024. The decision is part of a broader shake-up of NASA's Artemis program announced last week by NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman. The changes cancel the previously planned next-generation Exploration Upper Stage and push the first crewed moon landing from Artemis III to Artemis IV. NASA said it skipped a competitive bidding process because United Launch Alliance was the only contractor capable of delivering a compatible upper stage on the required timeline. NASA originally planned to launch the first three Artemis missions using United Launch Alliance's Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage before transitioning to the Exploration Upper Stage, built by Boeing, beginning with the Artemis IV mission. Under the new plan, NASA is moving away from those plans due to cost and schedule overruns. NASA's Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel endorsed the revised approach, and Boeing - the contractor that builds the rocket's core stage - expressed support for the changes. The agency says standardizing the rocket design and flying more frequently will improve crew safety and reduce costs.
Watch: U.S. is now in a '2nd cold war' in space. United Launch Alliance CEO Tory Bruno joined National Security Editor Guy Taylor and National Security Correspondent John Seward for an exclusive video interview at the 2025 Reagan National Defense Forum, discussing the urgency of space operations in the great power competition between the U.S., China, Russia and more. This video is sponsored by United Launch Alliance.