Space Club Seeks Florida Award Nominees
(Source: NSCFL)
The National Space Club Florida Committee is accepting nominations for
its premier award, the 2025 Space Heroes and Legends Award, for
significant contributions to the advancement, awareness, and
improvement of aerospace in Florida. The selection criteria and online
nomination form are available by direct link on the NSCFL website.
Click here. (12/10)
China Readies for Launch of National
Broadband Megaconstellation (Source: Space News)
China is preparing to launch the first satellites of a national
broadband megaconstellation. A Long March 5B rolled out to the pad at
the Wenchang Satellite Launch Center Tuesday ahead of a launch expected
in the coming days, based on publication of airspace restrictions.
Leaked mission patches suggest the payload for the mission will be
Guowang satellites for China Satellite Network Group Co., Ltd. (China
SatNet), which runs the national Guowang megaconstellation. Guowang, or
"National Network," is China's project to establish a national
satellite internet constellation with nearly 13,000 satellites. It is
separate from Qianfan, another Chinese megaconstellation that has
already launched its first satellites. (12/11)
Intelsat-33e GEO Breakup 'Noisy'
Enough to Cover Nefarious Deployment (Source: Space News)
The breakup of a commercial GEO communications satellite illustrates
threats to space activities. The October incident involving
Intelsat-33e created more than 700 pieces of debris, according to
ExoAnalytic Solutions. That cloud of debris creates "noise" in GEO, a
company executive said: if "you were planning for it as a bad guy, you
could deploy anything you wanted at GEO in the noise that created."
Boeing is still investigating what caused the failure of Intelsat-33e
after a similar satellite, Intelsat-29e, was lost in 2019. (12/11)
LeoLabs Opens Seventh Radar Site (in
Arizona) for Space Tracking (Source: Space News)
LeoLabs has opened a new radar for tracking space objects. The company
said Tuesday it opened its seventh radar site, this one located in
Arizona. The radar installation features next-generation UHF technology
designed to track activities in low and very low Earth orbit as well as
potential future applications in missile and hypersonic glide vehicle
detection. The new radar includes capabilities to maintain custody of
maneuverable objects, detect non-cooperative launch activities and
track objects nearing atmospheric reentry. (12/11)
Geomagnetic Storms Affect Satellite
Orbits, and Complicate Collision Prediction (Source: Space News)
Geomagnetic storms can affect satellite orbits and the ability to
predict potential collisions. A major storm in May caused predictions
of satellites' orbits to be off by as much as 20 kilometers, according
to research presented at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical
Union (AGU) this week. Those errors are linked to low accuracy of
forecasts of the timing and intensity of the storms, which increase
atmospheric density and thus drag. The May storm, as well as another in
October, also caused "mass migrations" of up to 5,000 satellites,
primarily SpaceX Starlink spacecraft, in a single day as they raised
their orbits automatically to counteract the drag. That can also
degrade the ability to accurately maneuver to avoid potential
collisions. (12/11)
NASA's Westlake Optimistic for GDC
Funding (Source: Space News)
A NASA official is cautiously optimistic that a key heliophysics
mission threatened with cancellation will continue. Speaking at a town
hall meeting during the AGU conference, Joe Westlake, director of
NASA's heliophysics division, said there was "positive movement" for
securing funding for the Geospace Dynamics Constellation (GDC) mission
but added that it was "still not quite out of the woods". NASA proposed
canceling GDC in its fiscal year 2025 budget request despite the fact
that GDC was a top priority of the previous heliophysics decadal
survey. GDC would fly six spacecraft in low Earth orbit to study
interactions between the magnetosphere and upper atmosphere. (12/11)
France's Ion-X Raises $13.7 Million
for Electric Propulsion (Source: Space News)
French propulsion startup Ion-X raised 13 million euros ($13.7 million)
to further work on electric propulsion systems. The company announced
the Series A funding round Tuesday from private investors as well as
European Innovation Council (EIC) Fund and the Île-de-France regional
government. The company said the funds will allow it to accelerate
development and expand production of electrospray thrusters for small
satellites and constellations. Ion-X plans to begin producing 10
thrusters per month by 2026, building up to 200 thrusters per year by
2028. (12/11)
Babin to Chair Space Subcommittee (Source:
House of Representatives)
The chairman of the House Science Committee's space subcommittee will
lead the full committee next year. Rep. Brian Babin (R-TX) announced
Tuesday that the House's Republican Steering Committee selected him as
the next chairman of the House Science Committee. Babin, whose district
includes NASA's Johnson Space Center, has chaired the space
subcommittee the last two years. In a statement, he signaled that
regulatory reform will be a priority for the committee in the next
Congress: "industry should operate at the rapid speed of innovation
rather than the sluggish pace of bureaucracy." (12/11)
Europe's Sentinel-1C Produces First
Radar Imagery (Source: ESA)
A European radar imaging satellite launched last week has already
returned its first images. ESA released Tuesday the first radar images
taken by the Sentinel-1C spacecraft that was launched last Thursday.
ESA emphasized "an exceptional level of data quality" in those initial
images, the first of which was taken less than two and a half days
after launch. Full commissioning of the spacecraft will still take
several months. (12/11)
UAE Seeks to Build Gateway Airlock (Source:
The National)
The UAE is in discussions with American and European companies to build
an airlock for the lunar Gateway. The UAE's Mohammed bin Rashid Space
Centre is considering bids from a "publicly listed US aerospace
manufacturing and space infrastructure technology company" and a French
manufacturer for the airlock module. NASA announced early this year an
agreement with the UAE, where that country would provide the airlock
module for the Gateway in exchange for NASA flying an Emirati astronaut
to the Gateway. The UAE hopes to complete the airlock by 2030, assuming
no changes by the next administration in NASA's plans to develop the
Gateway. (12/11)
ViaSat Advances US Military C5ISR
Capabilities (Source: Benzinga)
Viasat has secured a General Services Administration contract worth
$568 million to enhance surveillance, communications and intelligence
capabilities for US defense forces. This follows a 2019 contract
supporting the migration of capabilities from Special Operations Forces
to General Purpose Forces. (12/10)
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