Rocket Lab - 'Bridging The Swarm' Launch - YouTube

Rocket Lab will try again tonight (Jan. 29) to launch a South Korean disaster-monitoring satellite, and you can watch the action live.

This will be the second liftoff attempt for "Bridging the Swarm." The first, on Dec. 15, ended with a last-second abort. And even that try was delayed a bit; Rocket Lab had originally targeted Dec. 10 but pushed things back to perform additional checkouts.
"Bridging the Swarm" will launch a single payload for the Satellite Technology Research Center (SaTReC) at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).
That payload is NEONSAT-1A," an advanced Earth-observation satellite equipped with a high-resolution optical camera," Rocket Lab wrote in a mission description.
"Designed to capture near-real time natural disaster monitoring for the Korean peninsula, KAIST's NEONSAT constellation is a collaboration across multiple Korean academic, industry and research institutions, including SaTReC, which is leading the program's system design and engineering," the company added.
NEONSAT is not a constellation yet. So far, just one satellite in the program has reached low Earth orbit — NEONSAT-1, which flew atop an Electron in April 2024.
The NEONSAT program is funded by the Korean government — namely, the Ministry of Science and ICT. (ICT stands for "Information and Communication Technology.")
If all goes to plan tonight, the Electron's "kick stage" will deploy NEONSAT-1A about 54 minutes after launch, setting it free 336 miles (540 kilometers) above our planet.
"Bridging The Swarm" will be Rocket Lab's second launch of 2026 and its 81st overall to date. The company launched 21 missions last year, setting a new Rocket Lab record.

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