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Sounding Rocket Missions

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A sounding rocket launches into a light blue sky with a group of spectators watching in the foreground. The rocket is a long, thin, blue and gray cylinder with blue tail fins near the end. It’s launching from just to the right of center up and slightly to the left.

Future Missions

Turbulent Oxygen Mixing Experiment Plus (TOMEX+)

Rocket Type: Three sounding rockets- two Terrier-Improved Orion rockets and one Black Brant IX
Launch Date: Night. No Earlier than August 17, 2025
Launch Location: Wallops Island, Virginia
Description: A mission to understand the role of turbulence and other atmospheric disturbances in the dynamics and mixing of the upper atmosphere, and the characterization of these disturbances in three dimensions. TOMEX+ investigates atmospheric mixing in the mesosphere-lower thermosphere (MLT) using newly-developed ultraviolet lidar technology. Three rockets will be launched for this mission, an instrumented Black Brant IX and two Terrier-Improved Orions deploying vapor tracers.
Principal Investigator: Dr. Clemmons, Aerospace Corporation

RockSat-X

Rocket Type: Terrier-Improved Malemute sounding rocket
Launch Date: 6-10 a.m. ET, August 12. Backup days August 13-15, 2025
Launch Location: Wallops Island, Virginia
Description: RockSat-X is a competitive student program where college and university teams design and build experiments that fly on a sounding rocket, reaching space altitudes of 150-170km where they experience microgravity and full space environment exposure. The program involves a rigorous year-long process of design reviews, testing, and integration, culminating in an August rocket launch at Wallops Flight Facility.
Additional Information: RockSat-X website

Past Missions

Solar eruptioN Integral Field Spectrograph (SNIFS)

Rocket Type: Black Brant IX sounding rocket
Launch Date: 3 p.m. ET, July 18, 2025
Launch Location: White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico
Description: SNIFS is designed to study the high frequency dynamics associated with small nanoflares, spicules, and Rapid Blue-shifted Excursions (RBEs), as well as, large solar flare energy releases in the lower solar atmosphere.
Principal Investigator: Dr. Phil Chamberlin, University of Colorado.
Additional Information: Factsheet, NASA article

RockOn

Rocket Type: Terrier-Improved Orion sounding rocket
Launch Date: 5:30 a.m. ET, June 26, 2025
Launch Location: Wallops Island, Virginia
Description: The 17th annual sounding rocket mission dedicated to carrying student designed experiments into suborbital space. Twenty five college teams participated in the RockOn workshop to build experiments onsite prior to the launch, and 7 colleges and universities and 1 educational organization provided experiments as part of the RockSat-C program.
Additional Information: RockOn website, blog post, factsheet

a group of approximately 100 students sitting on the grass at sunrise, All are facing the camera with an empty rocket launch rail in the background
Students participating in the 2025 RockOn mission at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility pose in front of the Horizontal Integration Facility after the successful launch of a sounding rocket that carried their experiments into suborbital space
NASA/ Berit Bland

Sporadic-E Electro Dynamics (SEED)

Rocket Type: Two Terrier-Improved Malemute sounding rockets
Launch Date: Rocket #1: 4:27 a.m. ET June 20, 2025. Rocket #2: 5:11 a.m. ET, June 28, 2025
Launch Location: Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands
Description:  The SEED missions aimed to collect the first simultaneous multipoint spatial and temporal observations of low-latitude Sporadic-E layers and their associated electrodynamics and neutral dynamics. 
Principal Investigator: Dr. Aroh Barjatya, Embry Riddle University.
Additional Information: Article, factsheet

Auroral Waves Excited by Substorm Onset Magnetic Events (AWESOME)

Rocket Type: Two Terrier-Improved Malemute sounding rockets, one Black Brant XII sounding rocket
Launch Date: Rocket #1: 7:52 a.m. ET, March 25, 2025. Rocket #2 (Black Brant XII): 8:30 a.m. ET, March 25, 2025. Rocket #3: 5:30 a.m. ET, March 29, 2025
Launch Location: Poker Flat Research Range, Alaska
Description:   3-payload campaign that will study the density, wind, and composition perturbations that occur in Earth’s high latitude thermosphere in response to impulsive local forcing during auroral substorms. AWESOME is motivated by the premise that generation of acoustic-gravity waves play a far greater role in substorm response than is generally recognized or implemented in current models.
Principal Investigator: Dr. Mark Conde, University of Alaska Fairbanks
Additional Information: Factsheet, article

Ground Imaging to Investigation of Auroral Fast Features (GIRAFF)

Rocket Type: Two Terrier-Black Brant IX sounding rockets
Launch Date: Rocket #1: 3:07 a.m. ET, February 2, 2025. Rocket #2: 4:35 a.m. ET, February 9, 2025
Launch Location: Poker Flat Research Range, Alaska
Description: A mission to  study the processes responsible for creating the fastest optical variations observable within the aurora. Two identical rockets were launched into a pulsating aurora.
Principal Investigator: Dr. Robert Michell, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Additional Information: Factsheet, NASA article

Black and Diffuse Aurora Science Surveyor (BaDASS)

Rocket Type: Black Brant IX sounding rocket
Launch Date: Original window Jan 21- Feb 10, 2025. Science conditions not observed, rocket remained grounded through end of launch window. The team is reviewing future launch opportunities.
Launch Location: Poker Flat Research Range, Alaska
Description:  This mission was designed to explore the processes responsible for creating the optical variations observable within the diffuse aurora and will specifically target the black aurora (BA).
Principal Investigator: Dr. Samara, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Additional Information: Factsheet, NASA article

Beam-Spacecraft Plasma Interaction and Charging Experiment (B-SPICE)

Rocket Type: Black Brant IX sounding rocket
Launch Date: 6: 58 a.m. ET, November 23, 2024
Launch Location: White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico
Description: A tethered rocket experiment, dedicated to investigate the mitigation of spacecraft charging induced by an electron beam using a plasma contactor. Successful completion of this experiment will raise the technological readiness level (TRL) of the described spacecraft-charging mitigation scheme for application to active experiments in the low-density magnetosphere.
Principal Investigator: Dr. Brian Gilchrist, University of Michigan
Additional Information: Factsheet

Latest Content

Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

NASA to Launch SNIFS, Sun’s Next Trailblazing Spectator
4 min read

July will see the launch of the groundbreaking Solar EruptioN Integral Field Spectrograph mission, or SNIFS. Delivered to space via a Black Brant IX sounding rocket, SNIFS will explore the energy and dynamics of the chromosphere, one of the most…

Article
NASA Launching Rockets Into Radio-Disrupting Clouds
5 min read

UPDATE June 30, 2025: The second rocket of the SEED mission launched on Saturday, June 28, at 8:11 p.m. Marshall Islands Time (MHT). Principal investigator Aroh Barjatya reports that the rocket launched into active science conditions in the ionosphere and…

Article
NASA to Launch Three Rockets from Alaska in Single Aurora Experiment
4 min read

UPDATE March 31, 2025: The third and final rocket of the AWESOME mission launched on Saturday, March 29 at 1:30 a.m. AKDT. The payload systems functioned properly with a yet-to-be-determined issue with TMA release resulting in a single persistent upleg trail instead of modulated upleg…

Article

The Sounding Rockets Program Office supports the NASA Science Mission Directorate’s strategic vision and goals for Earth Science, Heliophysics and Astrophysics.