Mission

Above the Summer Sky

MISSION NAME

Above the Summer Sky

CARRIER NAME

ION SCV Joyful Julia

LAUNCH DATE

July 2026

LAUNCH SITE

Vandenberg

LAUNCHER

SpaceX

ROCKET

Falcon 9

MISSION STATUS

Ongoing

PASSENGERS

7

SATELLITES ONBOARD

3

HOSTED PAYLOADS

4

Mission Updates


UPDATE 1

July 7th, 2026

Launch

D-Orbit successfully launched Above the Summer Sky, the 23rd commercial mission of the ION Satellite Carrier (ION), on July 7, 2026, as part of SpaceX’s Transporter-17 mission. The Falcon 9 lifted off at 00:12 PT (07:12 UTC) from Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California, deploying ION SCV Joyful Julia into a Sun-Synchronous Orbit at an altitude of approximately 590 km.


Throughout the Above the Summer Sky mission, ION SCV Joyful Julia will deploy three satellites and perform four hosted-payload demonstrations in orbit.

Our mission operations team is now conducting the Launch and Early Orbit Phase (LEOP), setting the stage for the upcoming operational phase.

Photo credit: SpaceX
Photo credit: SpaceX

Roadmap

PHASE 1 - COMMISSIONING

As soon as ION SCV Joyful Julia reaches orbit, our spacecraft operations engineers will establish a bidirectional communication channel and start the launch and early orbit phase (LEOP), neutralizing the rotation imparted by the launch vehicle during separation, correcting the attitude, testing the satellites' subsystems, and preparing for the next phases.

PHASE 2 - COMMERCIAL PHASE, HOSTED PAYLOAD DEMONSTRATION

Once concluded the commissioning phase, ION SCV Joyful Julia will start the commercial phase of the mission, which will consist in the deployment of the hosted satellites and the in-orbit demonstration of the third-party payloads hosted onboard. For this mission, ION will deploy three satellites and perform four in-orbit demonstrations of hosted payloads.

PHASE 3 - DECOMMISSIONING

At the end of the mission, the platform will join the fleet of IONs already in orbit and operated by the company. At the end of its life, the spacecraft will be decommissioned in compliance with the Space Debris Mitigation guidelines. The pressure vessels will be depleted from leftover fuel and oxidizer, the battery charging system will be deactivated, and the batteries will be completely discharged. The spacecraft, now inert, will enter a decommissioning trajectory that will bring it to burn up upon atmospheric re-entry within a few years.