United Launch Alliance (ULA) will ship one other batch of Amazon’s web satellites to orbit on Monday morning (Dec. 15), and you may watch the motion stay — if you happen to’re an evening owl or a really early riser.
Amazon Leo, beforehand often called Undertaking Kuiper, is Amazon’s deliberate satellite-internet megaconstellation in low Earth orbit (LEO).
The community will finally include about 3,200 satellites, which will reach orbit on more than 80 launches performed by a variety of rockets. Six of those missions have been completed to date, lofting 153 Project Leo satellites to the final frontier. (Those numbers don’t count a test mission that carried two prototype satellites to LEO in October 2023.)
Monday’s launch will be the fourth Project Leo mission for the Atlas V, a venerable and highly dependable rocket that debuted in August 2002. ULA is phasing out the Atlas V in favor of a new vehicle called Vulcan Centaur, which has three missions under its belt to date.
When it’s up and running, Project Leo will beam internet connectitvity down to people around the globe. It will compete with SpaceX’s Starlink megaconstellation, which already provides service to customers using more than 9,000 satellites in LEO. And that number is growing all the time; SpaceX has launched more than 3,000 Starlink satellites so far in 2025 alone.
Interestingly, SpaceX is helping to build out the Project Leo network; its Falcon 9 is among the rockets that Amazon has tapped to launch the megaconstellation, along with Arianespace’s Ariane 6, Blue Origin’s New Glenn and ULA’s Atlas V and Vulcan Centaur.