Enables future re-extraction when KB has grown in relevant domains. Sources can be re-queued if last_attempted is stale relative to domain growth. Pentagon-Agent: Leo <14FF9C29-CABF-40C8-8808-B0B495D03FF8>
4.4 KiB
| type | title | author | url | date | domain | secondary_domains | format | status | last_attempted | priority | tags | processed_by | processed_date | enrichments_applied | extraction_model | extraction_notes | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| source | Rocket Lab prepares for Neutron debut in mid-2026 after record-breaking 2025 | NASASpaceFlight.com / SpaceflightNow (aggregated) | https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/12/rocket-lab-2025-overview/ | 2025-12-00 | space-development | report | null-result | 2026-03-11 | medium |
|
astra | 2025-12-15 |
|
anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5 | Extracted two claims: (1) Neutron as evidence of market segmentation by payload class with distinct competitive dynamics in medium-lift vs superheavy, (2) Rocket Lab's component integration strategy as alternative to SpaceX full-stack integration. Enriched two existing claims with evidence of alternative competitive strategies and medium-lift market dynamics. Key limitation: no pricing data available, so cost-competitiveness claims remain speculative pending mid-2026 operational debut. Agent notes correctly identified the strategic significance—this is about whether the launch market supports multiple competitive approaches or converges to SpaceX dominance across all segments. |
Content
Rocket Lab's Neutron medium-lift rocket is targeting debut no earlier than mid-2026:
- Development since early 2021
- 13,000 kg to LEO (15,000 kg expendable configuration)
- Up to 1,500 kg to Mars or Venus
- Carbon-composite second stage qualified April 2025
- Launch Complex 3 (LC-3) at Wallops: opened August 2025 with 700-ton steel/concrete launch mount, 757,000-liter water tower, propellant tank farm
- First flight vehicle expected to ship to Wallops Q1 2026
Partially reusable first stage. Neutron represents Rocket Lab's transition from small-lift (Electron) to medium-lift.
Rocket Lab had a record-breaking 2025 with Electron launches and expanded its vertical component integration strategy.
Agent Notes
Why this matters: Neutron fills a different niche than Starship or New Glenn — medium-lift reusable. This is the "workhorse" segment where many commercial satellites need to go. Not challenging SpaceX for the keystone variable (super-heavy), but providing an alternative for medium payloads. What surprised me: Carbon-composite second stage is unusual and potentially a significant weight advantage. What I expected but didn't find: Pricing. How does Neutron's $/kg compare to Falcon 9? Is it cost-competitive with SpaceX rideshare? KB connections: SpaceX vertical integration across launch broadband and manufacturing creates compounding cost advantages that no competitor can replicate piecemeal Extraction hints: Rocket Lab's vertical component integration as an alternative competitive strategy (not replicating the SpaceX flywheel but building a different kind of moat). Neutron as evidence that the launch market is segmenting by payload class. Context: Rocket Lab is the second most prolific orbital launch provider after SpaceX, with a track record of operational reliability on Electron. Neutron is their bid for the medium-lift market.
Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor)
PRIMARY CONNECTION: SpaceX vertical integration across launch broadband and manufacturing creates compounding cost advantages that no competitor can replicate piecemeal WHY ARCHIVED: Rocket Lab's alternative competitive strategy (component integration, medium-lift niche) as evidence that the launch market supports multiple competitive approaches, not just the SpaceX flywheel EXTRACTION HINT: Focus on market segmentation by payload class — the keystone variable (super-heavy) and the workhorse market (medium-lift) may have different competitive dynamics
Key Facts
- Neutron: 13,000 kg to LEO (15,000 kg expendable), up to 1,500 kg to Mars/Venus
- Carbon-composite second stage qualified April 2025
- Launch Complex 3 at Wallops opened August 2025: 700-ton launch mount, 757,000-liter water tower, propellant tank farm
- First flight vehicle expected Q1 2026 for mid-2026 debut
- Neutron development initiated early 2021
- Rocket Lab is second most prolific orbital launch provider after SpaceX