Learn About Rocket Lab's AI Products
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Start Learning Free📋About Rocket Lab
Updated July 5, 2026Rocket Lab is an American aerospace and space-systems company founded in 2006 by Peter Beck, who remains its chief executive. Headquartered in Long Beach, California, it went public on the Nasdaq (ticker RKLB) through a 2021 SPAC merger. Rocket Lab has grown from a small-satellite launch startup into a vertically integrated, end-to-end space company spanning launch vehicles, spacecraft, and satellite components — positioning itself as one of the few competitors to SpaceX across multiple layers of the space economy.
The company's workhorse is Electron, one of the most frequently flown small orbital rockets, with more than 50 successful launches. Its larger, partially reusable Neutron rocket — powered by the in-house Archimedes engine — is in development for a first flight targeted around late 2026 and is central to Rocket Lab's push into medium-lift launch and national-security missions. Beyond launch, its Space Systems division builds spacecraft (the Photon platform) and satellite components — reaction wheels, star trackers, solar arrays, and separation systems — sold across the industry, and the company carries a multibillion-dollar order backlog.
AI is a tool inside Rocket Lab's engineering and operations rather than a product it sells. The company applies machine learning across manufacturing — automated fiber placement, weld analysis, and defect detection that speed production and improve component quality — and relies on onboard autonomy for guided descent, spacecraft operations, and mission software. In May 2026 it agreed to acquire Motiv Space Systems, a Pasadena robotics firm with Mars-proven precision mechanisms and roughly 50 engineers, adding in-house robotic arms and actuators for surface and on-orbit operations and making Rocket Lab one of the few companies able to offer end-to-end Mars mission hardware.
Rocket Lab sits at the intersection of the commercial space boom and the growing national-security demand for responsive, US-based launch and satellite capability. Its vertically integrated model — launch, spacecraft, and components under one roof — is a bet that owning the full stack, and increasingly the autonomy and robotics that run it, will matter as much as the rockets themselves.
