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NASA Just Picked Eric Schmidt's Rocket Company To Race SpaceX To Mars

Published Jun 18, 2026
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Summary:
  • NASA selected Relativity Space to design, build, and fly the Aeolus spacecraft to Mars with a target launch window of 2028.
  • Eric Schmidt, who bought a majority stake in Relativity after the company hit fundraising trouble, now leads the firm and has not disclosed what NASA is paying.
  • Relativity has never reached orbit and still needs to complete its Terran R rocket before it can attempt the mission.

A rocket company that has never reached orbit just landed a NASA contract to fly to Mars. Its only previous launch broke apart mid-flight in 2023.

The company is Relativity Space - and it's now run by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt.

The Deal

On Wednesday, NASA hired Relativity to design the spacecraft, load it with science instruments, and get it to the Red Planet. The mission is called Aeolus and it's set to launch in 2028.

It's the same playbook NASA has been running for years, with the agency designing the science while a private partner builds and flies the hardware.

SpaceX got a version of this deal for space station cargo runs, and Firefly Aerospace got one for a Moon lander.

Aeolus will carry four instruments to orbit Mars and take readings. NASA wants daily updates on the planet's weather and atmosphere - data it says it needs before sending humans anywhere near the surface.

NASA didn't say how much it's paying Relativity, and Relativity didn't comment.

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The Schmidt Angle

Schmidt bought a majority stake in Relativity last year after the company ran into fundraising trouble. He made himself CEO and has stayed quiet about his plans.

What's known: he's reportedly using the rocket to launch a space telescope funded by his family foundation, and he's talked publicly about putting data centers in orbit.

The Mars contract gives him a shot at something Elon Musk has been promising for years but never actually done - send a real mission to Mars.

(Yes, Musk launched a Tesla in that direction in 2018, but that was marketing, not a science mission.)

Schmidt and Musk already trade jabs publicly over AI safety, and now they're competing in space too.

The Risks

NASA's track record with startup partners is mixed, with some going bankrupt before delivering and one Moon lander tipping over on arrival.

Relativity hasn't even finished the rocket that will carry Aeolus. It still needs to design and build the spacecraft, complete a rocket that has never flown, and hit a 2028 launch window all at once.

NASA is betting that lower costs are worth the risk. If Relativity stumbles, the agency loses a mission - but if it works, NASA gets Mars data at a fraction of what an in-house program would cost.

What To Watch

The 2028 window is tight, and Terran R - Relativity's new rocket - still needs to prove it can reach orbit. If Aeolus does get off the ground on time, Relativity becomes the first private company to send a real mission to Mars.

Musk has been promising Mars for years, but Schmidt has roughly two years to launch and get there.

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