The Dragonfly rotorcraft will ride a Falcon Heavy into space in July 2028, kicking off a six-year journey to Titan.
![illustration of a silvery metallic rotorcraft flying over orangish dunes](https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/v2/t:0,l:0,cw:0,ch:0,q:80,w:320/zuZ9AZkM2DVmmE7GmTnN8R.jpg)
An illustration of NASA’s Dragonfly rotorcraft soaring in the skies of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan. (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Steve Gribben)
SpaceX’s powerful Falcon Heavy rocket will launch yet another high-profile NASA science mission.
The agency announced today (Nov. 25) that it has picked the Falcon Heavy to loft Dragonfly, a $3.35 billion mission that will investigate the life-hosting potential of Saturn’s huge moon Titan. The burly rocket also launched NASA’s Psyche asteroid probe and Europa Clipper spacecraft, in October 2023 and October 2024, respectively.
The Dragonfly contract is a firm, fixed-price deal with a value of nearly $257 million, “which includes launch services and other mission-related costs,” NASA officials wrote in an update this afternoon.