# A United Launch Alliance (ULA) rocket launched its heaviest-ever payload on Saturday morning.

*aerospace · news · 2026-04-03 · Space.com*

## Key points

- Atlas V launched its heaviest-ever payload, carrying 29 Amazon Leo satellites weighing 18 tons.
- This mission marks the first use of a higher-performing RL10C engine version for a larger payload.
- LA-05 is the first Atlas V mission to deploy 29 Amazon Leo satellites; previous launches carried 27.
- Amazon Leo now counts 241 satellites in orbit from nine launches, excluding a 2023 prototype flight.
- Extensive new engineering and safety analysis enabled carrying the increased satellite count and mass.

A United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V rocket launched its heaviest-ever payload on Saturday morning (April 4). The Atlas V lifted off Saturday at 1:46 a.m. EDT (0546 GMT) from Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, carrying 29 satellites for the Amazon Leo broadband constellation to orbit. Together, those spacecraft weigh 18 tons, according to ULA. The Atlas V successfully deployed all 29 into their target orbit, according to ULA. The Amazon Leo megaconstellation, previously known as Project Kuiper, will eventually consist of about 3,200 satellites in low Earth orbit. It's Amazon's answer to SpaceX's Starlink network, which beams internet service down from more than 10,000 satellites (and counting). Amazon Leo is still in its early stages; just 241 of the spacecraft have reached orbit to date over the course of nine launches (not counting a 2023 liftoff that sent up two prototype satellites). The Atlas V has now flown five of those operational missions. Three employed SpaceX's Falcon 9, and the other one used Arianespace's Ariane 6 heavy lifter. Saturday's launch, which Amazon called LA-05, was the first Atlas V mission to loft 29 Amazon Leo satellites; the others carried 27 of the spacecraft. "The increase is a result of detailed engineering work between Amazon Leo and ULA, and is made possible by a new, higher-performing version of the RL10C engine used on the rocket's Centaur upper stage," Amazon representatives wrote in a mission description. "While the engine has flown on previous missions, LA-05 marks the first time the program has completed the extensive engineering and safety analysis required to use it with our larger payload." And that payload was larger in a significant way, according to the LA-05 mission description: "With 29 satellites aboard, LA-05 will mark the heaviest payload ever flown on an Atlas V."

**Companies:** Amazon, United Launch Alliance
**Countries:** United States

[Read the full story on Space.com](https://www.space.com/space-exploration/launches-spacecraft/ula-atlas-v-amazon-leo-5-internet-satellite-launch)

---

Canonical: https://newsio.io/n/ddf5d7de-8f2e-4622-9054-ebd642ca312e/a-united-launch-alliance-ula-rocket-launched-its-heaviest-ever-payload-on-saturd
Summarized by Newsio from Space.com. https://newsio.io/how-it-works
