UNITED STATES AIR FORCE

Delta 7326-9.5 | Genesis

SUCCESSAug 8, 2001 at 16:13 UTCDelta II →
PADSpace Launch Complex 17A
SITECape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA →
ORBITHeliocentric L1
TYPEPlanetary Science
PROGRAMDiscovery Program

Launch delayed from February 10 and July 30. The Genesis probe flew to the Earth-Sun L1 Lagrangian point and spend two years collecting samples of the solar wind. The collected samples were to be physically returned to Earth in a sample return capsule (air-snatch recovery was planned over Utah) and analysed in ground-based laboratories. On September 8, 2004, the Genesis space probe became the first spacecraft to return from beyond lunar orbit to the Earth’s surface. The Genesis Sample Return Capsule separated from the spacecraft on September 8, 66,000 km above the Earth. The capsule successfully re-entered the atmosphere over Oregon at 11 km/s, but a wiring error resulted in the drogue parachute release mortar failing to fire at 33 km altitude. The capsule crashed to earth at 90 m/s in the Dugway Proving Ground at 40 07 40 N 113 30 29 W. Although the vehicle was smashed, some of the samples could be retrieved.

VEHICLE
Delta II
MISSION
Genesis
MISSION TYPE
Planetary Science
TARGET ORBIT
Heliocentric L1
PROGRAM
Discovery Program
COUNTRY
USA
CONFIRMEDPrecision: Minute
LAUNCH LIBRARY 2 PRIMARY
API ID: 40413059-61e7-4ae4-ad16-e03c08b4aea3
Reported date: Aug 8, 2001 at 16:13 UTC
Last synced: 8 hours ago
This launch date and time are confirmed by the launch provider. Countdown is active.
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MANUFACTURER
McDonnell Douglas
VARIANT
7326-9.5
FLIGHTS
3
SUCCESSES
3
SUCCESS RATE
100%

Delta II was an expendable launch system, originally designed and built by McDonnell Douglas. Delta II was part of the Delta rocket family and entered service in 1989. Delta II vehicles included the Delta 6000, and the two later Delta 7000 variants ("Light" and "Heavy"). The rocket flew its final mission ICESat-2 on 15 September 2018, earning the launch vehicle a streak of 100 successful missions in a row, with the last failure being GPS IIR-1 in 1997.

When is the Delta 7326-9.5 | Genesis launch?
The Delta 7326-9.5 | Genesis is scheduled for Wednesday, August 8, 2001 at 4:13 PM UTC. This is the NET (No Earlier Than) time and may be subject to change. Current status: SUCCESS.
What rocket is being used for Genesis?
The Delta 7326-9.5 | Genesis mission uses the Delta II rocket, manufactured by McDonnell Douglas. The Delta II has flown 3 times with a 100% success rate.
Where is the Delta 7326-9.5 | Genesis launching from?
The launch takes place from Space Launch Complex 17A at Cape Canaveral SFS, FL, USA.
What orbit is Genesis going to?
The Genesis mission is targeting Heliocentric L1.
Who is launching Genesis?
The Delta 7326-9.5 | Genesis is operated by United States Air Force. It is part of the Discovery Program program.
Can I watch the Delta 7326-9.5 | Genesis launch live?
Yes. Visit the launch detail page on Space Launch Live for embedded YouTube webcasts, replay videos, and links to live coverage from SpaceX, NASA, NASASpaceflight, and other channels.
Mar 29, 2026 01:07 UTC
Launch added to tracker
Imported from Launch Library 2 API
Mar 29, 2026 01:07 UTC
Launch date set: Aug 8, 2001 at 16:13 UTC
NET (No Earlier Than) confirmed by United States Air Force
Mar 29, 2026 01:07 UTC
Launch completed successfully
Updated via Launch Library 2
Mar 20, 2026 13:55 UTC
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GENESIS mission patch
GENESIS mission patch
ESA
Last data sync: 8 hours ago
Launch Library 21 day ago
Launch ID: 40413059-61e7-4ae4-ad16-e03c08b4aea3
Spaceflight News API1 day ago
12 articles matched
Open-Meteo Weather1 day ago
Pad weather at 28.45, -80.57