Atlas V Rocket to Launch Record-Breaking 29 Satellites for Amazon Leo Internet Constellation

April 3, 2026
Atlas V Rocket to Launch Record-Breaking 29 Satellites for Amazon Leo Internet Constellation
  • A ULA Atlas V rocket will launch its heaviest-ever payload on a mission designated Amazon Leo 5, from Space Launch Complex 41, carrying 29 Amazon Leo satellites.

  • This marks the first Atlas V mission to deploy 29 satellites for Amazon Leo, following previous Atlas V payloads that included missions using SpaceX Falcon 9 and Ariane 6.

  • The LIVestream will invite viewer interaction on YouTube, with notes on commenting and display name requirements.

  • Amazon Leo, formerly Project Kuiper, aims to build a roughly 3,200-satellite low Earth orbit internet constellation to compete with SpaceX’s Starlink.

  • The 29 satellites will begin deployment about 21 minutes after liftoff, with the Centaur’s RL10C-1-1 upper stage reigniting roughly 55 minutes after launch for a disposal burn.

  • This mission is called Amazon Leo 5 by ULA and LA-05 by Amazon, representing the fifth operational Amazon Leo launch and the ninth overall in the constellation.

  • Amazon credited the engine’s performance margin and an expanded four-level dispenser configuration as key factors enabling the larger payload.

  • The extra satellites are enabled by a larger upper-stage dispenser and the RL10C-1-1 engine on the Centaur, enhancing Atlas V’s payload capacity.

  • ULA conducted a launch readiness review in late March, then rolled to the pad before a weather delay forced a rollback and subsequent return to the pad.

  • To date, 212 Amazon Leo satellites have reached orbit across eight launches, with two prototypes launched in 2023 not counted among the eight.

  • Liftoff is scheduled for early Saturday morning, April 4, at 1:45 a.m. Eastern Time, on a north-easterly trajectory from Cape Canaveral.

  • LA-05 represents a major milestone for both Amazon Leo and Atlas V, reflecting extensive safety and engineering work to accommodate the heavier payload.

Summary based on 2 sources


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