Rocket Lab sent eight Japanese satellites to orbit from New Zealand on Wednesday night (April 22), including one with a unique “origami” construction.
An Electron vehicle launched the “Kakuchin Rising” mission from Rocket Lab‘s New Zealand site on Wednesday at 11:09 p.m. EDT (0309 GMT and 3:19 p.m. local New Zealand time on Thursday, April 23).
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View from the upper stage of a Rocket Lab Electron rocket during the “Kakushin Rising” launch on April 22, 2026. The first stage is visible falling back to Earth. (Image credit: Rocket Lab)
“Kakuchin Rising” is the second of two contracted Electron missions for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s (JAXA) Innovative Satellite Technology Demonstration Program.
The first such flight, which Rocket Lab called “RAISE and Shine,” occurred last December. It sent JAXA’s Rapid Innovative payload demonstration Satellite-4, known as RAISE-4, to low Earth orbit to test a variety of technologies.
The eight satellites flying on “Kakuchin Rising” are a diverse bunch. They include “educational smallsats, an ocean monitoring satellite, a demonstration satellite for ultra-small multispectral cameras, and a deployable antenna that can be packed tightly using origami folding techniques and unfurled to 25 times its size,” Rocket Lab wrote in a mission description.
“Kakuchin Rising” was the 79th launch to date for the 59-foot-tall (18-meter-tall) Electron, which gives small satellites dedicated rides to Earth orbit and beyond.
Rocket Lab also flies missions to and from suborbital space using a modified version of Electron called HASTE. Customers book HASTE missions primarily to test hypersonic technologies.