Aerojet Gets $215 Million to Boost
Production of Solid Rocket Motors, for Ukraine Weapons (Source:
Space News)
The Defense Department has agreed to provide Aerojet Rocketdyne $215.6
million to expand its rocket propulsion manufacturing faciltiies in
order to speed up production of missiles for Ukraine, the Pentagon
announced April 14. Aerojet Rocketdyne makes rocket engines and
propulsion systems for space vehicles, ballistic missiles and military
tactical weapons. Aerojet will use the funds to expand and modernize
facilities in Arkansas, Alabama, and Virginia, where the company
manufactures rocket propulsion systems. Aerojet, one of only two major
U.S. defense producers of solid rocket motors, is in the process of
being acquired by L3Harris pending regulatory approval. (4/14)
SpaceX May Lease High Bay 1 in NASA's
VAB (Source: Ars Technica)
Last August, NASA issued an agency announcement asking for industry
proposals to lease the Vehicle Assembly Building High Bay 1 at Kennedy
Space Center. This is the same iconic building in Florida where NASA
stacks its Space Launch System rocket. In November, NASA selected a
proposal. However, agency spokeswoman Patti Bielling declined to name
the winner, telling Ars that terms are still being negotiated, and "the
process does not conclude until the parties execute the lease, at which
time NASA will announce the selection."
I bring this up because two people have told me that SpaceX won the
competition to use the high bay for its Starship program. The sources
said SpaceX does not plan to perform stacking operations inside the
VAB, but rather will use the facility for storage and integration of
payloads on Starship before flight. This might be an interim usage by
SpaceX while the company develops a larger facility on Roberts Road
near the Florida spaceport. It sounds like SpaceX will continue to
build Starships in South Texas and ship them to Florida for the time
being. (4/14)
Firefly Completes Static Test Fire for
Next Launch (Source: Ars Technica)
The Texas-based launch company said Wednesday night that it completed a
full-duration static fire test for the third launch of its Alpha
rocket, confirming that "all systems and components are operating
within flight parameters before launch." The test was conducted at the
company's facilities at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.
An uncertain launch date ... The company has not provided a launch date
for the mission. In fact, as part of the Space Force's VICTUS NOX
responsive space mission, Firefly will need to have the payload
encapsulated, mated, launched, and placed into low-Earth orbit within
24 hours of receiving the launch notice and orbit requirements. The
program aims to demonstrate the United States’ capability to rapidly
respond to on-orbit needs during a conflict. (4/14)
China Declares a Price War on SpaceX
(Source: Ars Technica)
Chinese space authorities plan to drastically cut the cost of space
launches in response to challenges from SpaceX's reusable rockets, the
South China Morning Post reports. According to the publication, the
country's Long March rockets can deliver a payload to orbit at about
$3,000 per kilogram. The country's space officials are apparently
concerned about the potential for SpaceX's Starship to reduce the cost
by a factor of 10 or more.
It will take some time ... The details in the article are fairly
sparse, but Chinese space officials appear to be contemplating the
development of a large reusable space plane that can carry both large
amounts of cargo and passengers into low-Earth orbit, as well as being
capable of point-to-point travel. Dubbed the Long-Range Aerospace
Transportation System, Chinese officials are aiming to develop the
vehicle and bring it into operational readiness by the 2040s. (4/14)
Europe Unlikely to Pivot to Reuse Soon
(Source: Ars Technica)
Arianespace CEO Stéphane Israël said Europe would have to wait until
the 2030s for a reusable launch vehicle, European Spaceflight reports.
Israël explained that, in his opinion, Ariane 6 would fly for more than
10 years. Europe would then look to transition to a reusable successor
for introduction in the 2030s.
A decade is a long time ... Europe currently has two development
programs as part of an effort to develop a reusable launch vehicle,
Prometheus and Themis. However, these programs are more akin to
SpaceX's Grasshopper test vehicle rather than something resembling a
reusable, orbital-class rocket. If Europe waits another decade or
longer to introduce a reusable launch vehicle, it will fall
significantly further behind the United States and China in launch
technology. (4/14)
Might Lockheed Martin Buy ULA?
(Source: Ars Technica)
It has been about six weeks since Ars first reported that United Launch
Alliance is up for sale by its parent companies, Lockheed Martin and
Boeing, who each own a 50 percent stake. In that time, there has been a
flurry of speculation about who will acquire the company. However, this
week, the Space Case newsletter makes a compelling case that Lockheed
is likely to buy out Boeing and operate the launch company on its own.
The newsletter sets a value of $4 billion to $5 billion on ULA based on
its operating income of about $200 million. It also provides a credible
rationale for Boeing wanting to sell its share for immediate revenue,
which could shore up Boeing's balance sheet. So what's the case for
Lockheed? "Lockheed Martin isn’t looking to sell its stake in ULA. It
has ample financial flexibility and is looking to double down on the
recent success of its space businesses. Additionally, it is the only
company that could see material cost savings by fully acquiring ULA,"
the newsletter states. (4/14)
The Next Battle for U.S. Military
Launch Contracts is About to Begin (Source: Space News)
In the fiercely competitive space launch industry, United Launch
Alliance and SpaceX have established themselves as the reigning
providers of U.S. national security launch services, leaving little
room for potential rivals to challenge their dominance. However, with
the Space Force’s latest strategy to procure future launch services,
new doors of opportunity may finally open for up-and-coming contenders.
“Our strategy shows a lot of confidence in the commercial sector,” said
Maj. Gen. Stephen Purdy, program executive officer for assured access
to space at the U.S. Space Force’s Space Systems Command. In a bid to
expand the military’s capabilities for putting payloads in space,
Purdy’s office in February rolled out a draft solicitation for the
National Security Space Launch (NSSL) Phase 3, a multibillion-dollar
procurement of launch services projected for 2025 through 2029.
The goal is to procure reliable launch services for traditional
military and intelligence heavy-lift missions while seeking smaller,
medium-size rockets to deploy the Pentagon’s new proliferated
constellation in low Earth orbit. The forthcoming Phase 3 procurement
also addresses criticism that surfaced four years ago when the Air
Force formulated the NSSL Phase 2 plan. Lawmakers and industry players
at the time expressed reservations about the strategy, alleging that it
stifled fair competition. (4/14)
In Navy Experiment, Commercial
Satellites Serve as Key Weapons Against Drug Traffickers
(Source: Space News)
In an experiment last fall near Virginia’s coast, a team of engineers
used commercial hardware, software and satellite data to show the U.S.
Navy how it could quickly turn information from satellites into useful
intelligence. The Office of Naval Research sponsored the experiment to
identify readily available technologies that could help U.S. Southern
Command to detect and identify illegal drug-trafficking boats that turn
off their lights at night and do not emit radio signals. (4/14)
Space Debris Problem Spurs a Bold
Change in US Government Regulations (Source: Space.com)
The fast-growing space debris issue is top of mind at a new
space-focused division of the U.S. government. "Satellite and orbital
debris rules" will be one of the primary responsibilities of the newly
created Space Bureau of the FCC. The regulator announced the new bureau on Tuesday. The FCC is trying to pivot quickly amid
a fast-changing space environment; more satellites launching and an
increasing collision risk are among the challenges it faces. For
example, that the regulator has an application backlog representing
60,000 new satellites targeting low Earth orbit. (4/12)
New Map of Dark Matter Validates
Einstein's Theory of Gravity (Source: Gizmodo)
Scientists using data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope in Chile
have made a detailed map of dark matter’s distribution across a quarter
of the sky. The map shows regions the distribution of mass extending
essentially as far we can see back in time; it uses the cosmic
microwave background as a backdrop for the dark matter portrait. The
team’s research will be presented at the Future Science with CMB x LSS
conference in Kyoto, Japan. (4/12)
Florida Lightning Strike Results in
Groundbreaking Find: USF Scientist ‘Never Seen This… on Earth’
(Source: The Hill)
A professor at the University of South Florida discovered something
never-before-seen on Earth after analyzing a dirt sample that was
struck by lightning. The phosphorus material, he said, was observed for
the first time in solid form on this planet. “We have never seen this
material occur naturally on Earth,” said Matthew Pasek, professor of
geosciences. “Minerals similar to it can be found in meteorites and
space, but we’ve never seen this exact material anywhere [here on
Earth].”
“We do find materials like these spheres in a number of different
lightning strikes so I would bet for certain that there are other
occurrences like this in lightning strikes and probably beyond that.”
While Pasek said it’s unlikely the material could be mined for uses
similar to other phosphates, there are plans to further investigate the
material to see if it could be officially declared a mineral. According
to the professor, it’s important to understand how much energy
lightning has because then we know how much damage a lightning strike
can cause on average and how dangerous it is. (4/12)
Russia Will Use International Space
Station 'Until 2028' (Source: Space Daily)
Russia said Wednesday it planned to use the International Space Station
until 2028, an apparent reversal of an earlier announcement to quit the
orbiting laboratory after 2024. In July last year, Moscow said it was
leaving the ISS "after 2024" as ties unravelled between the Kremlin and
the West over Moscow's military intervention in Ukraine. On Wednesday,
the head of Russian space agency Roscosmos, Yuri Borisov, said Moscow's
participation in the international space project had been extended.
(4/12)
Spotlight on Ganymede, Juice's Primary
Target (Source: Space Daily)
Why focus on Ganymede? There are a handful of key reasons Juice will
home in on Ganymede. Firstly, Ganymede is thought to have a salty ocean
beneath its icy shell. This ocean may be large enough to wrap around
the entire planet, although we're unsure of what it's like. What is it
composed of, and how deep is it? One of Juice's key goals at Ganymede
is to explore this body of water, while also comparing it to Jupiter's
other ocean-bearing moons to get a clearer picture of these worlds as
potential habitats for life.
Ganymede also displays complex interactions with the space environment
around Jupiter, one of the most intense and dynamic regions in the
Solar System. It is also the only moon - and one of only three solid
bodies - in the Solar System to generate its own intrinsic magnetic
field. How does it do this? What drives and maintains Ganymede's
internal dynamo, and why don't we see one on other moons? Ganymede's
magnetic field forms a little magnetic bubble (a magnetosphere) that
exists within the larger magnetosphere of Jupiter itself; this bubble
constantly interacts with the electromagnetic fields and hot, ionised
matter (plasma) flooding the region, and produces strong auroras. (4/13)
Keep US Space Command Headquarters in
Colorado (Source: Washington Examiner)
The nation must ensure that the Space Command is on the surest possible
footing for future success. This is crucially important to remember as
the Biden administration considers whether to reverse former President
Donald Trump's politically contemptuous and strategically reckless
directive to relocate the U.S. Space Command headquarters from Peterson
Space Force Base in Colorado to the Redstone Arsenal in Alabama. A
Government Accountability Office study found the "appearance of bias"
in Trump's decision. That puts it mildly. (4/13)
The Daily Life of Astronauts on the
Space Station is a Test for What's Next in Space Exploration
(Source: CBC)
NASA has edged closer to its goal of sending humans back to the moon,
thanks to work being done by astronauts who live in space for months at
a time, conducting experiments and doing medical research. Now an
ambitious new documentary, filmed entirely by astronauts aboard the
ISS, is providing a glimpse of what future space travellers can expect.
Space Explorers: Moonrise on the ISS follows seven astronauts as they
go about their daily lives on the space station. They are candidates
for NASA's Artemis program that plans to land humans on the moon again
by the end of the decade. But the astronauts are not only in front of
the camera. You can't send a production crew into space, so they also
became the cinematographers.
The documentary is an intimate look at the physical and emotional
realities of living in space. Years of training are put to the test as
the crew overcomes disorientation in zero gravity, responds to
potential catastrophic emergencies and learns how to function as a
close-knit team. Each of them shares their perspectives on the future
of spaceflight, and how mankind got to this point in space exploration
since humans last set foot on the moon during the Apollo missions of
the '60s. (4/13)
'Momentum High' as Austin's Firefly
Aerospace Prepares for Moon Missions with NASA (Source: Austin
American-Statesman)
As NASA gears up to return to the moon in the coming years, Cedar
Park-based aerospace company Firefly Aerospace is preparing technology
that will play a key role in two trips in the next several years.
Firefly is working full speed ahead as it prepares for government and
commercial missions that will bring its customers more access to space
in the coming years, including supporting NASA’s upcoming moon
exploration, according to company leaders. This includes a new contract
it was awarded last month, through which the company will help bring
experiments and explore the near and dark sides of the moon for NASA.
(4/13)
Clearing the Air From Apollo to
Artemis, NASA Tests New CO2 Scrubber on Space Station (Source:
Space.com)
A new air filtration system featuring a first-of-its-kind,
magnetic-bearing air blower has been installed on the International
Space Station (ISS). The carbon dioxide scrubber not only advances the
life support capabilities for the orbiting laboratory's crew, but may
possibly benefit future astronauts on the moon and Mars as well.
California-based Calnetix Technologies announced on April 13 that its
high-speed blower system was deployed with NASA's Four Bed Carbon
Dioxide Scrubber (FBCO2) that has been operating continuously on the
space station for the past two months. (4/14)
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