Trinity Mission will Deploy Satellites to Three Different Orbits
K2 Launching Aboard Falcon 9 to LEO, MEO and GTO Altitudes
A contract has been signed for the launch of three K2 Space satellites aboard a single SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket for deployment to three different orbital altitudes. The mission, designated Trinity, will include multiple deployment events to allow the satellites to operate at low-Earth orbit (LEO), medium-Earth orbit (MEO), and geostationary transfer orbit (GTO).
“We are building a true multi-orbit satellite that can proliferate in LEO, in MEO, and out to GEO.”
Karan Kunjur, K2 Space
K2’s Trinity mission goes beyond technological demonstration; it is a blueprint for agile, scalable satellite operations across orbital regimes. By using a single launch to deploy satellites across multiple orbits, the mission avoids the cost and complexity of coordinating multiple rockets or rideshare arrangements.
The Trinity mission is made possible by K2’s in-house designed 20kW high power electric propulsion system, which allows a K2 satellite to orbit raise from LEO to MEO or GTO to GEO on its own in just a few weeks – a fundamental capability for deploying constellations in the higher orbits. K2’s Trinity mission will deliver higher orbit access with greater autonomy and operational impact.
“We are bringing something brand new to the satellite bus industry,” said Karan Kunjur, Co-Founder and CEO at K2 Space. “We are building a true multi-orbit satellite that can proliferate in LEO, in MEO, and out to GEO. Rather than simply stating we can proliferate all those orbits, we decided to prove it by deploying into all three orbital regimes on one rocket launch.”
Trinity will follow K2’s upcoming February 2026 mission Gravitas (K2-1), launching as part of an upcoming rideshare mission with SpaceX. Gravitas will serve as a technology pathfinder by demonstrating K2’s orbit-raising capabilities from LEO to MEO and enabling long-duration operations in MEO.
Like Gravitas, the Trinity mission will support a hybrid customer base of U.S. government and commercial partners, underlining the power of leveraging commercial innovation for national security objectives.
“K2’s approach to deploying our satellites is aggressively pushing the boundaries of what is technologically possible in a smart, deliberate way,” said Dr. John Plumb, Head of Strategy at K2 Space and former Pentagon Space Policy Chief. “With Gravitas in 2026, we’re demonstrating core capabilities; with our 2027 mission, we’re operationalizing them. And throughout both missions we are further reducing risk and proving the platform. This is not just about delivering satellites – it’s about strengthening national security and advancing the US commercial space economy by delivering powerful platforms at low cost and at scale.”