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Tuesday, September 1, 2026 · 130 days away
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Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Launch
Event overview
NASA's next flagship infrared observatory; 100x wider field of view than Hubble. Target accelerated from 2027.
NASA is targeting early September 2026 for launch of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, the agency's next flagship astrophysics observatory, atop a SpaceX Falcon Heavy from Kennedy Space Center. Roman will lift off to the Sun–Earth L2 Lagrange point — the same gravitational parking spot used by the James Webb Space Telescope — to begin a planned five-year primary mission surveying dark energy, exoplanets, and infrared astrophysics.
The Roman Space Telescope, formerly known as WFIRST, was renamed in May 2020 for the late Nancy Grace Roman, NASA's first chief of astronomy and the woman widely credited as "the Mother of Hubble." Its 2.4-meter primary mirror — the same aperture as Hubble — was donated by the National Reconnaissance Office in 2012, but Roman's Wide Field Instrument delivers a field of view roughly 100 times larger than Hubble's, enabling it to map swaths of sky rather than point targets. The observatory also carries the Coronagraph Instrument, a technology demonstration designed to block starlight to image exoplanets directly. Lifecycle cost is capped at $4.3 billion under a 2017 commitment; the project passed its Critical Design Review in 2021 and completed integration of the outer barrel assembly and Wide Field Instrument through 2024. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center leads the mission, with major hardware contributions from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Caltech IPAC, the Space Telescope Science Institute, and the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory. The agency confirmed in its 2025 schedule update that launch was being advanced from the earlier 2027 target window to as early as October 2026, then revised to early September 2026. Roman's three core science programs are the High Latitude Wide Area Survey, the High Latitude Time Domain Survey for supernovae, and a bulge microlensing survey toward the galactic center aimed at detecting thousands of exoplanets — the last of which Nancy Roman herself championed in planning memos years before her death in 2018.
Early September 2026 aligns Roman's launch window with the L2 transfer geometry needed for a one-month cruise to the Lagrange point, followed by six months of commissioning before science operations. Meeting the September target also demonstrates that NASA's flagship astrophysics program can deliver a major observatory close to its original schedule — an important counterpoint to Webb's 14-year slip. The date triggers Falcon Heavy pad assignments at LC-39A and kicks off the guest-observer proposal cycle.
Roman launches roughly a month before Nobel Prizes 2026 announcement week — a fertile coincidence for science coverage. Space-sector readers tracking next-generation planetary missions may also follow NASA Dragonfly Launch 2028 and parallel programs such as Chandrayaan-4 Launch 2027.
When exactly is NASA Roman Telescope Launch 2026? Targeting early September 2026; NASA has flagged a window as early as September 1.
Is NASA Roman Telescope Launch 2026 confirmed or expected? Expected; the September 2026 target is the current official schedule but remains subject to integration and range availability.
Who is responsible for NASA Roman Telescope Launch 2026? NASA Goddard Space Flight Center leads the mission; SpaceX provides the Falcon Heavy launch service.
Where can I read the official announcement? NASA's schedule update is at https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/nasa-targets-early-september-for-roman-space-telescope-launch/.
Source
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/nasa-targets-early-september-for-roman-space-telescope-launch/Related countdowns
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