Starship/Super Heavy Achieves Launch,
Explodes in Flight (Source: SPACErePORT)
SpaceX achieved a major objective of its first Starship/Super Heavy
launch on Thursday by rising above its Texas launch complex without
destroying the infrastructure there. This was the second attempt to
launch the world's most powerful rocket after FAA approval was received
on April 14. The first attempt was scrubbed on April 17, requiring
dozens of tanker trucks to replenish the fuel/fluids that boiled off or
could not otherwise be re-captured into the tank farm. (The tanker
convoy approach seems unsustainable for SpaceX's plans for frequent
launches.)
After the rocket cleared the pad on Thursday, it seemed to ascend with
about six of its 33 methane/oxygen first-stage engines out. As it
passed 'max-q' and readied for stage separation the vehicle appeared to
veer to the right and began a wide corkscrew tumble before exploding.
The first stage's engines were scheduled to shut down after 169
seconds, followed by stage separation after three more seconds. The
rocket seemed to begin an anomalous corkscrew at about 140 seconds into
flight, which worsened until about 237 seconds when the rocket
exploded, without stage separation.
This suggests multiple problems, perhaps cascading from whatever caused
the corkscrew spin. Without stage separation the first stage may have
begun its pre-programmed flip/boostback maneuvering while still
attached to the Starship. Seeing video of the rocket's errant flight
path, I'm surprised the automatic destruct system didn't destroy the
vehicle earlier. Perhaps it was so far downrange that auto-destruct
parameters weren't a factor. Indeed, it is unclear if the destruct
system engaged at all, as it may have been aerodynamic pressures that
destroyed the vehicle. Looking forward to the official SpaceX/FAA
failure analysis. (4/20)
Suggestions of Hydraulic System, Pad
Debris, Aerodynamic Stability as Causes of Starship/Super Heavy Test
Failure (Source: SPACErePORT)
Post-launch views of SpaceX's Starbase launch site indicate that
the massive rocket's ignition pushed a lot of stuff around, with GSE,
fences, cars, cameras, and other equipment damaged by blast and debris.
Some observers suggest launch pad debris may have caused damage to the
engines or affiliated hardware on the first stage. Some say the rocket
left the pad slower than expected, and at an odd angle.
Multiple engines failed to properly ignite or failed during flight,
which may not have been fatal as SpaceX designed the vehicle to reach
orbit with some engines out. However, during the rocket's ascent, what
may be a hydraulic power unit (HPU) seems to have failed explosively,
blasting debris around the engine chamber. This could have been a
result of launch pad debris blowback. Other observers speculate the
engine/hydraulic failures could have inhibited the rocket's ability to
steer itself as Starship's nose flaps imparted directional drag
pressure on the rocket's trajectory.
This was an old version of the Super Heavy stage, with newer versions
already in the hangar, replacing the HPUs with an electric system for
engine orientation. Also, in a post-launch statement, SpaceX clarified
that the rocket's flight termination system was indeed activated to
destroy both the first stage and the Starship. According to @ESGhound,
"SpaceX has shut access to the Wildlife Refuge surrounding Boca Chica
for an additional 24 hours due to 'power outage at the launch site,'
preventing the State Parks service or FWS from assessing damage to the
area for now." Spectators in Texas and Mexico should expect to find
interesting pieces of debris on the shoreline in coming days. (4/20)
There's No Way to Make Space Travel
Good for Planet Earth Right Now (Source: TIME)
Since 2010, 217 Falcon 9s have flown, with 61 launches in 2022 alone,
making it the workhorse of the current global space fleet. So what’s
not to like? Plenty, actually—at least if you care about the
environment.
The Falcon 9 uses a fuel mixture of liquid oxygen and simple kerosene,
and while the oxygen does not do any harm to the skies, the black soot
created by the burning kerosene is injected directly into the
stratosphere—the layer of air ranging from 12 km (7.5 mi.) to 50 km (31
mi.) above the Earth. There the soot lingers for up to five years,
absorbing heat, contributing to climate change, and damaging the ozone
layer, which exposes the planet to dangerous ultraviolet (UV)
radiation. And SpaceX is not remotely alone. (4/19)
Phantom Space Selects Arnhem Space
Center for New Dedicated Launch Site (Source: Space Daily)
Phantom Space Corp. has announced the selection of Arnhem Space Center
(ASC) on the Gove Peninsula in Australia's Northern Territory for a
dedicated launch site. The Arnhem Space Center expands Phantom's space
launch capabilities with direct access to very low-inclination and
equatorial orbits.
Phantom is also developing a dedicated launch site, SLC-5, at
Vandenberg Space Force Base for access to polar, sun synchronous and
high-inclination orbits as well as a launch site, LC-13, at Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station for direct access to mid- and
low-inclination orbits. ASC is also Phantom's first launch site outside
the United States providing service to the Australian market and
Asia-Pacific region. (4/20)
Vaya Space and The Spaceport Company
Announce Partnership (Source: Vaya Space)
Vaya Space, the vortex-hybrid rocket engine company and emerging leader
in sustainable space access, has announced its partnership with The
Spaceport Company, builder of a network of distributed launch sites on
mobile offshore platforms solving the problem of spaceport congestion
and enabling point-to-point transportation. Vaya and The Spaceport
Company are negotiating a campaign of orbital launch operations to
commence as early as Q1 2025.
The Spaceport Company's sea-based platforms will complement Vaya's
existing launch site at Cape Canaveral, guaranteeing Vaya will always
have launch pad access to deliver customer payloads to orbit on
schedule, and ensuring Vaya can scale its launch cadence as demand
grows. The Spaceport Company provides infrastructure solutions for a
variety of deeptech industries, including orbital launch. They signed
an agreement with the Virginia Commercial Spaceflight Authority, and
plan to conduct their first offshore launch platform demonstration in
May 2023. (4/18)
Cleveland-area Council Approves Sale
of Land for Blue Abyss Astronaut Training Facility (Source: WEWS)
An out-of-this-world project is in the works in Brook Park, Ohio. A
British company is looking to build a new space research center and
astronaut-style boot camp near NASA's facility. The project is
garnering major support from city leaders. In fact, Brook Park City
Council suspended the rules and passed the sale of land for Blue Abyss
at a meeting Tuesday evening. Blue Abyss out of England sees promise
near the NASA Glenn Research Center.
They're looking to fill a gap and pump roughly $250 million into an
astronaut civilian training space, microgravity center, and 150-room
hotel. Construction is currently underway at a similar facility in
Cornwall, England. The Brook Park location will be built around a very
large, 150-foot deep, multi-level pool. (4/19)
Texas Gets Ready for Spaceports and
Flying Vehicles (Source: Dallas Morning News)
Outer space travel and flying cars may sound like something out of a
sci-fi novel, but Texas legislators are taking significant steps today
to seize the opportunities these fast-growing multi-trillion-dollar
industries present. Companies, entrepreneurs, universities and
community colleges across the state are already working to advance
various aspects of the burgeoning aerospace industry.
Here in North Texas, Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, Bell Flight and
Boeing are examples of a thriving aerospace industry. The University of
Texas at Arlington, the University of North Texas and Tarrant County
Community College also offer aerospace and engineering programs. In
addition, NASA-based programs inspire Texas K-12 students to study STEM
programs and engineering.
These private and educational efforts are not just happening in North
Texas, but all over the state. That includes West Texas, where Blue
Origin has its spaceport, and Houston, where NASA’s Johnson Space
Center has served as a hub for spaceflight for more than 60 years. NASA
estimates that its economic output alone in Texas totaled $9.3 billion
in fiscal year 2021. Click here.
(4/20)
Judge Orders Release of Georgia
Spaceport Records (Source: Brunswick News)
A court order released Wednesday requires the release of all records
withheld on the Georgia Open Records Act's real estate exemption for a
spaceport in Camden County by May 1. The lawsuit was filed by the
environmental organization One Hundred Miles when Camden County
officials continued to deny access to the records after 72% of voters
in March 2022 approved a referendum prohibiting county officials from
spending more money on the project. An estimated $12 million has been
spent on the project. (4/20)
Firefly Plans Medium-Class Rocket for
National Security Launches (Source: Space News)
Firefly Aerospace says it plans to offer a new medium-class rocket for
the Space Force's National Security Space Launch (NSSL) competition.
The medium-lift rocket it is developing in partnership with Northrop
Grumman, projected to launch in 2025, is being designed to compete for
NSSL Phase 3, the company said. Firefly expects its two-stage medium
vehicle, projected to lift 16,000 kilograms to low Earth orbit, to be
able to challenge Rocket Lab's Neutron and Relativity Space's Terran R
for NSSL awards. (4/20)
SpaceX Launches Starlink Satellites
From Florida, Recovers Booster (Source: NasaSpaceFlight.com)
SpaceX launched a set of second-generation Starlink satellites
Wednesday. A Falcon 9 lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Florida, at 10:31
a.m. Eastern and deployed 21 "V2 mini" Starlink satellites into orbit a
little more than an hour later. This is the second set of V2 mini
satellites launched after SpaceX encountered some problems with the
first set launched in late February. (4/20)
L3Harris Receives NASA Contract for
SLS Rocket Booster Support (Source: Executive Biz)
L3Harris Technologies will work on enhancing the performance of
Northrop Grumman-manufactured solid rocket boosters that will be used
for NASA’s upcoming Space Launch System Block 2 flights. Under a $27
million contract, L3 Harris will provide avionics, including system
control performance, to tackle booster obsolescence and environmental
impacts to ensure the safety of the first two minutes of flight. The
contract supports the space agency’s Space Launch System Booster
Obsolescence and Life Extension program and ultimately, NASA’s Artemis
missions. (4/19)
Virgin Orbit Seeks Quick Exit From
Bankruptcy (Source: Washington Post)
The CEO of Virgin Orbit says the company hopes to quickly exit Chapter
11 bankruptcy. Dan Hart said he has been in "a lot of discussions" with
potential buyers of the company, which would be done through a
bankruptcy sale the company hopes to concluded in late May. He
acknowledged that the company made mistakes, including deciding in late
2021 to go public through a SPAC merger. "I'd say our timing for this
SPAC was less than ideal." (4/20)
NASA COSMIC to Focus on ISAM
(Source: Space News)
NASA has established a new consortium for developing satellite
servicing technologies. The Consortium for Space Mobility and ISAM
Capabilities, or COSMIC, will start this fall to help coordinate
development of in-space servicing, assembly and manufacturing (ISAM)
technologies. A White House national ISAM implementation plan in
December directed NASA to set up the consortium that will include
companies, universities and government agencies. The Aerospace Corp.
will run COSMIC, with NASA providing funding. (4/20)
Intuitive Machines JV Lands $719M NASA
Contract (Source: Yahoo! Finance)
A joint venture led by Intuitive Machines with KBR has secured a
contract from NASA. The single-award contract has a five-year base
performance period and a maximum ordering value of $719 million. The
cost-plus-fixed-fee indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract
is meant to support work related to the Joint Polar Satellite System,
NASA's Exploration and In-space Services. (4/19)
Leidos Teams with NASCAR for Lunar
Rover Design (Source: Space News)
Leidos is partnering with NASCAR on a lunar rover design. Leidos
unveiled its design for a rover it will propose to NASA for the
agency's Lunar Terrain Vehicle (LTV) project. Leidos said it elected to
work with NASCAR to tap its expertise in automotive technologies as
well as marketing. Several other companies have announced their intent
to bid on the LTV later this year, with NASA using a services approach
to procure the rover that will be used on missions starting with
Artemis 5. (4/20)
Wanted: New Ideas to Live Off Moon
Resources (Source: ESA)
A new campaign on ESA’s Open Space Innovation Platform – seeking out
community input to accelerate ISRU – aims to identify knowledge and
technical gaps in our current lunar space resources value chain. Such
gaps shall in turn define future contests supported by ESA in
partnership with the European Space Resources Innovation Centre, ESRIC,
in Luxembourg. This Identifying Challenges along the Lunar ISRU Value
Chain campaign invites people to submit one or more ideas across three
areas tackling crucial steps in the extraction of lunar resources.
(4/20)
Aerojet Rocketdyne Wins $67M Contract
for Orion Thrusters Built in Seattle Area (Source: GeekWire)
Aerojet Rocketdyne says it’s received a $67 million contract award from
Lockheed Martin to provide propulsion systems for the Orion spacecraft
during three missions planned for the 2030s. The contract option for
NASA’s Artemis 6, 7 and 8 missions follows up on Aerojet’s work on
earlier missions in the Artemis program — including the uncrewed
Artemis 1 mission that flew around the moon last year, and the
history-making Artemis 3 mission that’s due to put a crew on the lunar
surface in the mid-2020s. (4/19)
Sweden Intends to Send ESA Astronaut
to the International Space Station with Axiom (Source: ESA)
ESA signed a letter of intent with the Swedish National Space Agency to
send an ESA astronaut to visit the International Space Station on an
Axiom mission. The flight and the name of the astronauts assigned to
the mission will need to be approved by the partners of the
International Space Station as well as the commercial flight operator
Axiom. (4/19)
NASA and Japan Team Up for
Unprecedented Martian Moon Mission (Source: Gizmodo)
NASA signed a memorandum of understanding with JAXA to join its
upcoming mission to the two Martian moons, Phobos and Deimos, which is
scheduled to launch in 2024. NASA has assembled a team of scientists
and prepared two instruments to board JAXA’s spacecraft to Mars. The
Martian Moons eXploration (MMX) mission will not only visit the two
mysterious moons that whirl around Mars, it will also land on the
cratered surface of Phobos to snag a sample from the largest of the two
moons. (4/19)
JAXA and JICA Host RSA Delegates to
Discuss Enhancing Partnerships between Japan and Rwanda (Source:
Space in Africa)
A team of delegates from the Rwanda Space Agency (RSA) were hosted by
the President of Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) during a
week-long strategic visit to enhance the space partnership between
Rwanda and Japan. On the sidelines of the delegation visit, the parties
discussed opportunities, collaborations and the utilization of space
technologies for mutual benefits and the advancements of their space
sectors for socio-economic development. (4/19)
Likely Meteorite Flashes Over Kyiv
(Source: BBC)
A flash seen in the skies above Kyiv Wednesday night was neither a
Russian missile nor an American satellite. The flash was seen by many
in the Ukrainian capital that triggered an air raid alert. Ukrainian
officials then said they thought that it may have been NASA's Reuven
Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) spacecraft,
which was predicted to reenter Wednesday night, but NASA said the
spacecraft was still in orbit at that time. The fireball was instead
likely an ordinary meteor. The U.S. Space Force said RHESSI reentered
over the border of Egypt and Sudan at 8:21 p.m. Eastern Wednesday.
(4/20)
SECAF Asks Congress' Permission to
Start Projects Prior to Funding Approval (Source: Space News)
The Secretary of the Air Force is asking Congress to allow the service
to start some programs before funding is provided for them. Frank
Kendall said it is "troubling" that the Air Force and Space Force have
not been able to start critical programs to compete with China because
of the lagging budget process. That includes new missile-warning
satellites and remote sensing satellites to track moving targets
and hypersonic vehicles, which are on hold until Congress passes a
final appropriations bill for 2024, which may not happen if Congress
instead passes a full-year continuing resolution. Kendall said he's
asked Congress to allow programs to start while funding is finalizing,
proceeding to the preliminary design review phase. (4/20)
L3Harris Awarded $145 Million Contract
to Modernize US Space Domain Awareness Capabilities (Source:
L3Harris)
L3Harris has been awarded option year four of the Maintenance Of Space
Situational Awareness Integrated Capabilities (MOSSAIC) program. The
$145 million contract from the U.S. Space Force continues the
modernization and sustainment of critical space infrastructure enabling
the Space Force core competency of Space Domain Awareness (SDA). Using
centers in Colorado, California and Virginia, MOSSAIC detects, tracks
and identifies deep space objects to provide timely and accurate space
surveillance information for military, civil and commercial users.
(4/19)
Ukraine Fighting Continues to
Underscore Importance of Space Capabilities (Source: Space News)
Ongoing fighting in Ukraine continues to underscore the importance of
combining military, civil and commercial space capabilities. An
international military panel at Space Symposium said the conflict
showed how Ukraine could fend off Russian forces with the help of
space-based weather data, communications, GPS, intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance. Commercial satellite imagery also
played a critical role in helping Ukraine and its allies counter
Russian propaganda. However, they said the war also highlighted the
growing importance of protecting those space capabilities from threats
that include cyberattacks. (4/20)
Ukraine Attempts To ‘Hack’ Russian
Satellites With Help From ‘Foreign Countries’; Moscow Says ‘We Have A
Right To Respond’ (SourcE: Eurasian Times)
The Russian foreign minister has alleged that Ukraine is attempting to
interfere with Russian communication satellites with the help of
foreign experts. On April 5, the Russian foreign ministry issued a
statement highlighting Ukraine’s alleged endeavor to interfere with
Russia’s civilian communication satellites, reported TASS.
The ministry noted that such an act is a severe breach of international
law, and Russia has the authority to respond suitably. Furthermore,
Moscow highlighted that they have all the required resources at their
disposal to take action. Russia has greater capabilities in outer space
compared to Ukraine. Based on what space experts have told EurAsian
Times, there could be a possibility that Ukraine, with the help of
Western countries, might interfere with data flow between Russian
satellites and ground stations. (4/7)
Space Investment Activity Picking Up
Again (Source: Space News)
Investment activity is picking up again for young space companies as
growth-stage capital returns following market uncertainty in 2022.
During a panel at Space Symposium this week, Seraphim Space CEO Mark
Boggett said there were a record 25 growth rounds, of Series B and
later, in the first three months of 2023. Those rounds, though, remain
smaller in value than previously seen in the industry. Space companies
saw a "huge amount of interest that has now gone wrong to some extent"
because of SPAC deals, he said. (4/20)
Google Selects SpaceChain Into its
Startups Program (Source: Space Daily)
SpaceChain has been accepted into the Google for Startups program. The
Google program is designed for early-stage companies such as SpaceChain
to help build a sustainable, successful business over the long-term by
providing the support, services and technology to do so. Under the
Google for Startups program, SpaceChain will be able to strengthen its
position in leading data and transactional integrity with space
infrastructure. Google's extensive resources will open multiple
opportunities for SpaceChain to explore more advanced processing
applications onboard LEO satellites systems as well as future payload
launches. (4/13)
Maxar Technologies Stockholders
Approve Acquisition by Advent International (Source: SpaceRef)
Maxar Technologies announced that at Maxar’s Special Meeting of
Stockholders they voted to approve that Maxar will be acquired by
Advent International, a global private equity investor. Under the terms
of the merger agreement, Maxar stockholders will receive $53.00 per
share in cash for every share of Maxar common stock they own
immediately prior to the effective time of the merger. Approximately
99.6% of the shares voted in favor of the transaction. (4/20)
Astroport Space Technologies Forms
European Subsidiary in Luxembourg (Source: Astroport)
Astroport Space Technologies, headquartered in San Antonio Texas, and
Interflight Global Europe, headquartered in Luxembourg, announce their
joint partnership for the launch of Astroport Space Technologies
(Astroport Europe). Astroport Europe will focus on development of lunar
construction and operations technologies needed for the company's goals
of emplacing lunar surface infrastructure assets such as roads and
landing pads in support of the NASA Artemis program and commercial
missions for mining and establishing a permanent presence on the Moon.
(4/19)
Odyssey is Zero-G's New CEO
(Source: LinkedIn)
Allison Odyssey is Zero-G’s new Chief Executive Officer with
responsibility for the overall management of the business,
communications with the board and stakeholders, fundraising, high-level
sales and marketing, and investor relationships. She also oversees
flight operations, training, maintenance, customer service, business
systems, IT, and HR. (4/19)
Russia Releases First Feature Film
Shot in Space (Source: Times of Malta)
The first feature film shot in space premiered in Russian cinemas on
Thursday, as Moscow exulted in beating a rival Hollywood project amid a
confrontation with the West. "The Challenge" is about a surgeon
dispatched to the International Space Station (ISS) to save an injured
cosmonaut. Russia sent an actress and a film director for a 12-day
stint on the ISS in October 2021 to film scenes aboard the orbiting
laboratory. (4/20)
Australia's Fleet Space Signs Space
Defence Contract (Source: Business News Australia)
South Australian commercial satellite company Fleet Space has penned a
$6.4 million contract with Australia’s Defence Space Command (DSC),
marking the company’s foray into the defence industry. Fleet Space will
deploy its next-gen Centauri satellites to create a LEO communications
system focused on tactical communications and data transmission where
connectivity is limited. According to Fleet Space, the project will see
DSC make use of its commercial space tech already used by the mining
industry for mineral exploration projects worldwide. (4/20)
ISRO to Carry Out In-Orbit Scientific
Experiments Using Spent PS4 (Source: The Hindu)
The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), which is scheduled to
launch the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle C55 (PSLV-C55) mission on
April 22 with Singapore’s TeLEOS-2 as primary satellite and Lumelite-4
as a co-passenger satellite, will will carry out in-orbit scientific
experiments by using the spent PS4 (fourth and final stage of PSLV) as
an orbital platform. The PSLV-C55 mission has Bellatrix Aerospace's
PSLV Orbital Experimental Module (POEM), where the spent PS4 of the
launch vehicle would be used as an orbital platform to carry out
scientific experiments through non-separating payloads. (4/20)
Pangea Ditches Rocket Development and
Signs on to Provide Engines for US Launch Startup (Source:
European Spaceflight)
Spanish space propulsion startup Pangea Aerospace has announced that it
has entered into a partnership with New York-based launch startup
Tehiru. Tehiru is developing a reusable air-launched rocket that will
be capable of carrying 550-kilogram payloads to low Earth orbit. The
company has stated this it is working on an “innovative electric
landing mechanism” that will be used to recover the rocket following a
launch. Tehiru projects that it will be capable of reusing its rocket
up to 50 times. (4/19)
NASA Creates In-Space Servicing,
Assembly, Manufacturing Consortium (Source: SpaceRef)
NASA announced Wednesday a new consortium focused on making in-space
servicing, assembly, and manufacturing (ISAM) capabilities a routine
part of space architectures and mission lifecycles. Through a range of
capabilities, ISAM can enable new mission paradigms and extend the life
of spacecraft. In-space servicing encompasses activities including
spacecraft repair, refueling, relocation, and retrofitting, while
assembly and manufacturing includes abilities like 3D printing and
assembling components in space. Together, these capacities can enable a
more sustainable, robust, and enduring space ecosystem. (4/19)
NASA’s Photographer of the Year Awards
Showcase Stellar Shots (Source: PetaPixel)
NASA has announced the winners of its fifth annual Photographer of the
Year awards. The winning photos showcase NASA’s people, places, and
projects, as captured by NASA’s talented photographers. 12 photos won
awards this year, with first, second, and third-place winners selected
across four categories: Documentation, portrait, people, and places.
Click here.
(4/19)
China's Moon Plans Involve 3D Printing
Bricks From Lunar Soil (Source: Space.com)
China aims to test printing bricks from lunar regolith later this
decade in a step towards constructing a permanent base on the moon. The
country's Chang'e 8 mission is scheduled to land on the moon around
2028 and will likely include in-situ resource utilization tests, or
using resources found on the lunar surface. Scientists gathered at a
conference in Wuhan this week confirm that they are looking at 3D
printing bricks using materials from the lunar surface. (4/18)
We Should Pray that Musk Gets to Space
Before China (Source: The Telegraph)
The world is in the first stages of a new space race. Despite some
setbacks this will continue and accelerate, with transformative effects
for many aspects of life. The “race” or competition is partly between
nations, driven by geopolitical concerns. But, unlike in the 1960s or
1970s, it is also, perhaps even primarily, commercial and profit
driven. We should not decry this but hope earnestly that it continues
and that profit remains the dominant motive in the development of
space.
Right now, military action in space is prohibited by treaty. But the
great powers are already pushing this (both China and the US have Space
Forces as separate branches of their military). As well as a commercial
space race there could soon be a serious arms race in space. We should
ardently hope that if this does happen, it remains a subordinate and
supplementary activity to commercial competition.
Better that near-Earth space remain the arena for Jeff Bezos and Elon
Musk than it become the scene for a political and military competition
between China and the US (not to mention other powers). We have enough
geopolitical tensions here on Earth without adding to them – and the
consequences of combat in space could be very severe. Instead, let
capitalist competition work its magic, in space as elsewhere, and bring
both profit to investors and wider benefits to humankind. (4/18)
The Final Frontiers' Space Junk
Problem Has a Denver-Based Solution (Source: Denver Gazette)
The final frontier has a junk problem, and Astroscale is working to
change that. Founded and headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, the company
celebrated the grand opening of its United States headquarters at 2201
S. Delaware St., Denver, Sunday afternoon. The location will house 50
of Astroscale's roughly 60 U.S. based employees and features a mission
command center and design and testing labs. Colorado plays home to the
largest aerospace market in terms of jobs per capita, which convinced
Astroscale to select the south/central Denver location.
The metro Denver area plays home to giants like Lockheed Martin, Ball
Aerospace and Northrup Grumman, but also hosts a robust network of
smaller space companies of which Astroscale is a part of. "We are
building a servicing ecosystem shifting away from the throwaway culture
that is so prominent in the way we've done space to date," Dr. Clare
Martin, Astroscale's executive vice president, said. (4/17)
Aerospace CEO: More Startups Seek DoD
Work Amid Cash Crunch (Source: Space News)
Aerospace Corp.’s commercial space office, established to facilitate
connections between startups and government technology buyers, is
seeing a surge in activity. With a downturn in venture capital, a
growing number of companies are turning to the government for
opportunities, Aerospace CEO Steve Isakowitz told SpaceNews. Aerospace
is a federally-funded nonprofit based in El Segundo, California, that
provides technical guidance and advice to military and civil space
agencies.
In light of a somewhat cooled-off space economy, “more and more we’re
finding that companies that had been raising rounds of funding are now
looking much more to the government as an important customer,” he said.
As a result, Aerospace’s Commercial Space Futures office, created
approximately one year ago, has been inundated with an increased
workload. The office serves in a go-between role, assisting the U.S.
Space Force and other agencies in identifying potential commercial
solutions that align with national needs. (4/19)
U.S. Space Systems Command Imagines
Possibilities With Starship, New Glenn (Source: Aviation Week)
U.S. Space Systems Command is closely watching SpaceX’s launch test of
the fully reusable Starship/Super Heavy launch vehicle. The U.S. Space
Force’s development, acquisition, launch and logistics field arm, Space
Systems Command, sees multiple military applications for Starship,
including drastically reducing the cost to launch spacecraft to low
Earth orbit (LEO) and rocket cargo missions to anywhere in the world.
Starship, as well as Blue Origin’s New Glenn launch vehicle, are
designed to provide “massive throw weight to LEO, not to any other
domain,” Purdy says. “Potentially, long-term, we move to kind of a
massive freight-train model of pushing all the customers into LEO.” As
part of that concept, SSC envisions using space tugs to transport
spacecraft to their destinations, including regions as far as lunar,
extra-lunar and Mars orbits, he says.
Space Systems Command is also working with AFRL’s “Rocket Cargo”
program, an effort to examine the possibility of transporting military
cargo across the globe using such rockets. Noting that SpaceX President
Gwynne Shotwell has said the company aims to work toward launching
Starship as frequently as once per day—as well as acknowledging the
development and testing hurdles the rocket maker must overcome—Purdy
says the fully reusable, super-heavy launch capability is fascinating
to think about. (4/19)
China's New Space Station, Tiangong,
Will Run High-Energy Beam Experiments (Source: Forbes)
China has completed the remarkable feat of building and deploying its
third space station, Tiangong, in a mere two years. Translated,
Tiangong means "Palace in the Sky," and this new space station aims to
test various technologies that could eventually be used on a larger
scale, with both civilian and military applications. In addition to its
scientific applications, the TSS will be used as a testbed for China's
future manned spaceflight program.
The space station comes equipped with a vast array of onboard
instruments. For example, it features omnidirectional particle
detectors to study the radiation environment and to develop better
space-based weather prediction models. TSS is also equipped with an
intriguing new microwave beam technology that can transmit power to
ground stations around the clock. When most of us think of microwaves,
we think of using these frequencies for communications or perhaps to
heat food in an oven. But microwaves can be far more potent, and their
potential applications include beaming energy from space. (4/18)
Building Telescopes on the Moon Could
Transform Astronomy – and it’s Becoming an Achievable Goal
(Source: The Conversation)
Lunar exploration is undergoing a renaissance. Dozens of missions,
organised by multiple space agencies – and increasingly by commercial
companies – are set to visit the Moon by the end of this decade. Most
of these will involve small robotic spacecraft, but NASA’s ambitious
Artemis programme, aims to return humans to the lunar surface by the
middle of the decade. Several types of astronomy could benefit. The
most obvious is radio astronomy, which can be conducted from the side
of the Moon that always faces away from Earth – the far side.
The lunar far side is permanently shielded from the radio signals
generated by humans on Earth. During the lunar night, it is also
protected from the Sun. These characteristics make it probably the most
“radio-quiet” location in the whole solar system as no other planet or
moon has a side that permanently faces away from the Earth. It is
therefore ideally suited for radio astronomy.
Another potential application of far side radio astronomy is trying to
detect radio waves from charged particles trapped by magnetic fields –
magnetospheres – of planets orbiting other stars. This would help to
assess how capable these exoplanets are of hosting life. Radio waves
from exoplanet magnetospheres would probably have wavelengths greater
than 100m, so they would require a radio-quiet environment in space.
Again, the far side of the Moon will be the best location. (4/18)
What it Takes to Make a Suit Fit for
the Moon (Source: BBC)
First and foremost, of course, the new lunar spacesuits are essential,
life-supporting pieces of equipment to supply air and protect
astronauts from radiation and micrometeoroids. Despite the legacy,
there's always room for improvement. "Apollo used zippers, metal cables
and rubber in the suits that were 1960s technology and fine when used
for one mission but that's no longer the case," says Bill Ayrey. "The
biggest advances came just after Apollo when the Shuttle suit was
designed and made up of many components that could be switched out to
accommodate a wider range of crew members," says Ayrey, a former space
suit test engineer and historian at ILC Dover.
Many spacesuit materials for both environments still originate from the
1950s and 60s and include spandex, in the snug suit layer for liquid
cooling ventilation; Mylar for insulation; Kevlar, which is used in
bulletproof vests; flame resistant Nomex, worn by racing drivers; and
urethane-coated nylon which can have welded seams and is typically used
for the innermost airtight pressure garment 'bladder'. "Today's suits
will use advanced composites," says Ayrey, "and other materials to
provide structural strength and allow for sizing adjustments and
provide greater comfort while also providing an extended lifespan of
the suit components."
However, since NASA had already begun work on the new suit before
turning it over to industry, Axiom did not have to begin with a blank
page. "We started making modifications where designs weren't closed or
complete or where our team's expertise knew that we could make
improvements," says Greeley. "There are a few components, like the hard
upper torso and the helmet bubble, that were pretty mature in design
but we completely redesigned the pressure garment system. We also
reduced [the suit's] mass – a big change, we've taken 20lbs (9kg) out
of the suit so far – and we increased mobility." (4/19)
Failure of Epsilon-6 Launch was Caused
by Clogging of Fuel Pipe, JAXA Says (Source: NHK)
Japan's space agency says the launch failure of its Epsilon-6 rocket
last year was caused by a rubber membrane clogging a fuel pipe for the
direction control system. The rocket lifted off from the Uchinoura
Space Center in southwestern Japan on October 12. But the command
center sent a self-destruct signal minutes later because the vehicle's
direction control system did not function properly. (4/18)
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