- CONTACT US
- AFS
- Business
- Bussiness
- Car
- Career
- Celebrity
- Digital Products
- Education
- Entertainment
- Fashion
- Film
- Food
- Fun
- Games
- General Health
- Health
- Health Awareness
- Healthy
- Healthy Lifestyle
- History Facts
- Household Appliances
- Internet
- Investment
- Law
- Lifestyle
- Loans&Mortgages
- Luxury Life Style
- movie
- Music
- Nature
- News
- Opinion
- Pet
- Plant
- Politics
- Recommends
- Science
- Self-care
- services
- Smart Phone
- Sports
- Style
- Technology
- tire
- Travel
- US
- World

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Rocket Lab will launch a Japanese technology-demonstrating satellite on Monday night (Dec. 8), and you can watch the action live.
A 59-foot-tall (18 meters) Electron rocket is scheduled to launch the "RAISE and Shine" mission from Rocket Lab's New Zealand site Monday at 10 p.m. EST (0300 GMT and 4 p.m. local New Zealand time on Sunday, Dec. 7). That represents a delay of two days; Rocket Lab originally targeted Saturday night (Dec. 6).
Rocket Lab will stream the launch live beginning 30 minutes before liftoff. Space.com will carry the feed if, as expected, the company makes it available.
"RAISE and Shine" is the first flight that Rocket Lab has contracted directly with JAXA (the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency). It's part of a two-flight deal with the Japanese space agency; the second mission is a rideshare launch scheduled for early next year.
The California-based company has a long history with Japan overall, however, launching more than 20 missions to date for companies based in the Land of the Rising Sun.
Monday's launch will send JAXA's Rapid Innovative payload demonstration Satellite-4, known as RAISE-4, to a circular orbit 336 miles (540 kilometers) above Earth.
The satellite's full name tells us broadly what it will do up there. RAISE-4 "will demonstrate eight technologies developed by private companies, universities, and research institutions throughout Japan," Rocket Lab wrote in a mission description.
"RAISE and Shine" will continue a record-breaking year for Rocket Lab, which has launched 18 missions in 2025 so far, all of them successful. Fifteen of them have been orbital flights. The other three were suborbital launches with HASTE, a modified version of Electron designed to help customers test hypersonic technologies in the final frontier.
Rocket Lab's previous single-year launch record was 16, set in 2024.
Editor's note: This story was updated at 10:45 am ET on Dec. 7 with the new launch date of Dec. 8.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
25 Most Beautiful Villages in France You Can Actually Visit - 2
Brazil approves law strengthening protective measures for female victims of gender-based violence - 3
A coup too far: Why Benin's rebel soldiers failed where others in the region succeeded - 4
French lawmakers narrowly approve health care budget, suspending Macron's flagship pension reform - 5
Display of Netanyahu's severed head 'incites public to murder PM', Likud says in official complaint
Astronomers detect black hole blasting winds at incredible speeds
Misremembering might actually be a sign your memory is working optimally
This Week In Space podcast: Episode 188 — A New NASA Leader Rises?
Astonishing interstellar comet captured in new images by NASA Mars missions
Dark matter obeys gravity after all — could that rule out a 5th fundamental force in the universe?
Newly identified species of Tanzanian tree toad leapfrog the tadpole stage and give birth to toadlets
Foot fossil discovery could reshape human evolutionary history
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS' journey through our solar system, in photos
Scientists discover black hole flare with the light of 10 trillion suns













