NASA: Astronauts Never Were ‘Stranded’
(Source: Orlando Sentinel)
After the safe return Tuesday of two astronauts left behind for months
on the ISS , the White House characterized the pair as “stranded” and
trumpeted their return as a “rescue.” Those are words that NASA has
been resisting for months. It made for an awkward situation in a
post-splashdown press conference, when NASA administrators insisted
they could have brought Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams home at any
time, while also seeking not to contradict the president.
The two returned as part of SpaceX’s Crew-9 mission, having been on
board the station since June after flying up on Boeing’s Starliner.
“PROMISE MADE, PROMISE KEPT: President Trump pledged to rescue the
astronauts stranded in space for nine months,” was the message posted
to the White House X account after the landing.
But NASA officials, though parsing their words carefully, stuck to a
different narrative. “We always had a lifeboat, a way for them to come
home,” NASA Commercial Crew Program Manager Steve Stich said. (3/19)
Space Coast-Based CCT Wins Virginia
Spaceport Contract (Source: CCT)
The Virginia Commercial Spaceflight Authority has awarded Command and
Control Technologies Corporation (CCT) a contract for the modifications
to Pad-0A at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport, Wallops Island
Virginia. CCT will design and implement pad modifications to support
the new Northrop Grumman A330 launch vehicle and the new
Firefly/Northrop Medium Launch Vehicle (MLV). CCT will update pad
control hardware and software to process the new configurations.
The Pad-0A Universal Ground Control System (UGCS) is based on CCT’s
Command and Control ToolkitTM product line and provides highly
automated procedures for critical functions including vehicle fueling,
cryogenic handling, high pressure gases, transporter erector
supervisory control, and electrical ground Support equipment. Designed
to be readily adaptable to new requirements, the UGCS provides a
flexible environment for multi-vehicle processing and rapid response
operations. (3/21)
AIA Priorities Include Space
Exploration, Launch Licensing (Source: Payload)
The Aerospace Industries Association has outlined its top space
priorities for 2025. The list includes nearly three dozen to-dos for
government agencies ranging from the DoD to the FAA to NASA. The
organization emphasizes the need for increased investment in technology
and infrastructure to maintain US leadership in space. Click here.
(3/20)
AIA Is Not Worried About Anything (Source:
NASA Watch)
The Aerospace Industries Association just put their self-serving and
totally anodyne “Space Priorities 2025“. Its all bland happy talk – as
if nothing was really happening these days when it comes to the health
and well being of the aerospace sector. With all of the swirling
concern over budget cuts, program cancellations, and layoffs, you’d
think that a non-profit established to be concerned about the aerospace
sector would be a little more proactive in discussing these threats.
Guess again. (3/20)
New Planet Named Enaiposha is Unlike
Anything in Our Solar System (Source: Earth.com)
Enaiposha, that also goes by the identifier GJ 1214 b, was first placed
in a category that normally describes small, gas-rich worlds. New
observations, however, suggest that it is more like Venus but on a
bigger scale. Researchers propose calling it a super-venus because it
appears to have a thick atmosphere composed of hydrogen, helium, water,
methane and carbon dioxide. This finding came from recent measurements
that showed faint traces of molecules at key parts of the spectrum.
(3/20)
'His Faith Kept Him Going': Houston
Church Welcomes Starliner Astronaut Home (Source: Houston
Chronicle)
Less than a day after arriving back on Earth, NASA astronaut Barry
"Butch" Wilmore called his pastor Tommy Dahn. At the time, the minister
was preparing to lead his usual Wednesday evening Bible study at
Providence Baptist Church. "He told me how much he wished he could be
at the Bible study, that he misses fellowship and he'll be back in the
church as soon as he can." (3/20)
Musk's Pentagon Visit Sparks More
Questions About His Access to Sensitive Files (Source: NPR)
Elon Musk visited the Pentagon on Friday. But questions about why
ignited a fresh storm of controversy surrounding his access to
sensitive government information. The New York Times, citing unnamed
officials, reported that Musk would receive a briefing on U.S. plans
for any potential conflict with China, which involve some of the
military's most closely guarded secrets.
"The top-secret briefing that exists for the China war plan has about
20 to 30 slides that lay out how the United States would fight such a
conflict," the Times reported. "It covers the plan beginning with the
indications and warning of a threat from China to various options on
what Chinese targets to hit, over what time period, that would be
presented to Mr. Trump for decisions, according to officials with
knowledge of the plan." (3/21)
DoD Plans Thousands of Civilian Job
Cuts (Source: AP)
Roughly 50,000 to 60,000 civilian jobs will be cut in the Defense
Department, but fewer than 21,000 workers who took a voluntary
resignation plan are leaving in the coming months, a senior defense
official told reporters Tuesday. To reach the goal of a 5% to 8% cut in
a civilian workforce of more than 900,000, the official said, the
Pentagon aims to slash about 6,000 positions a month by simply not
replacing workers who routinely leave. (3/18)
General Atomics Marks Completion of
OTB Satellite Mission Ahead of Deorbit Phase (Source: Space
Daily)
General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems (GA-EMS) announced the
successful conclusion of its Orbital Test Bed (OTB) satellite's primary
mission, which began with its June 2019 launch. The satellite has now
transitioned into its projected 20-year deorbit trajectory. The OTB
platform was designed to accommodate various payloads, among them
NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate's Deep Space Atomic Clock
(DSAC). (3/19)
Space Solar Teams with MagDrive to
Boost In-Orbit Solar Power Systems (Source: Space Daily)
Space Solar, a leading force in the field of space-based solar power
(SBSP), has formed a strategic alliance with UK propulsion technology
company Magdrive to enhance the deployment of large-scale
infrastructure in orbit. The agreement, unveiled during the Farnborough
International Space Show (FISS), is formalized under the Space
Propulsion and Infrastructure Innovation Initiative (SPI3), reflecting
a concerted push to realize space-driven clean energy.
SPI3 is designed to help fulfil the UK's long-term goal of producing
scalable, sustainable energy directly from space. By integrating
Magdrive's advanced propulsion systems, the initiative addresses the
complex challenge of transporting, assembling, and managing substantial
SBSP infrastructure in orbit. (3/20)
ATLAS Joins Viasat to Enhance NASA's
Satellite Ground Services (Source: Space Daily)
ATLAS Space Operations has partnered with satellite communications
leader Viasat, Inc. to deliver essential support for NASA's current and
future missions. Viasat, among the initial group of four firms awarded
Task Orders under NASA's Near Space Network (NSN) Services contract,
will deploy its Real-Time Earth (RTE) network globally to boost NASA's
Direct-to-Earth (DTE) communications capabilities. ATLAS, recognized as
the largest U.S.-owned federated ground network and an innovator in
Ground Software as a Service (G-SaaS), will enhance Viasat's offering
by adding network capacity and integrating its proprietary Freedom
GSaaS platform. (3/19)
From Contract to Orbit in Record Time
for OroraTech Satellite Deployment (Source: Space Daily)
Rocket Lab has confirmed the rapid scheduling of an Electron mission
for OroraTech, a Germany-based specialist in wildfire detection and
monitoring technologies. The mission, titled "Finding Hot Wildfires
Near You," is slated for liftoff during a window beginning March 27th
UTC from Rocket Lab's Launch Complex 1 in New Zealand. Remarkably, this
launch was arranged just four months following the signing of the
contract, underscoring Rocket Lab's capability to meet tight deadlines
for time-sensitive satellite missions. (3/19)
Oxygen Detected in Most Distant
Galaxy: 'Astonished' Astronomers (Source: Space Daily)
Oxygen has been detected in the most distant galaxy ever discovered,
surprised astronomers said Thursday, offering further evidence that
stars in the early universe matured far quicker than had been thought
possible. The galaxy JADES-GS-z14-0, which was discovered by the James
Webb Space Telescope last year, is so far away that its light took 13.4
billion years to reach Earth. (3/20)
Space Forge Secures UK Approval to
Launch First Orbital Manufacturing Satellite (Source: Space
Daily)
Space Forge has achieved a historic milestone in the UK space industry
by securing a launch license from the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA)
for its ForgeStar-1 satellite, the nation's first in-orbit advanced
manufacturing platform. Scheduled for deployment later in 2025,
ForgeStar-1 will mark Wales' inaugural ISAM (In-Space Advanced
Manufacturing) mission and reinforce Space Forge's leadership in
orbital material production and return systems.
This regulatory greenlight enables Space Forge to proceed with its
debut in-orbit demonstration, which aims to showcase the feasibility of
its reusable, scalable satellite designed to produce advanced
semiconductor materials in space environments. The company leverages
the distinct advantages of the space environment-such as zero gravity,
vacuum conditions, and dramatic temperature variations-to fabricate
materials that cannot be created on Earth. (3/20)
T2S Solutions Acquires Blue Marble to
Bolster Space Technology Portfolio (Source: Space Daily)
T2S Solutions ("T2S"), a founder-led enterprise focused on delivering
advanced technologies for U.S. defense, intelligence, and national
security, has announced the acquisition of Blue Marble Communications,
a specialized developer of space-grade communication and computing
solutions.
As global demand intensifies for robust, high-speed technologies in
satellite and spaceflight applications, Blue Marble has emerged as a
key provider of systems including onboard processors, optical
terminals, RF modems and transceivers, network routers, and edge
processors. These tools enable next-generation satellite constellations
to operate with enhanced data processing efficiency and resilience,
meeting growing requirements from U.S. National Security interests and
commercial space ventures worldwide. (3/19)
South Africa China Achieve Milestone
with 12900 km Quantum Satellite Connection (Source: Space Daily)
Scientists from South Africa and China have achieved a historic
milestone in quantum communication by creating the world's longest
ultra-secure quantum satellite link, spanning an unprecedented 12,900
km. This link, established using the Chinese quantum microsatellite
Jinan-1 in low Earth orbit, is also the first of its kind ever
implemented in the Southern Hemisphere.
The collaboration between Stellenbosch University in South Africa and
the University of Science and Technology of China enabled the real-time
generation of quantum keys through Quantum Key Distribution (QKD).
These keys facilitated the transmission of encrypted images between
ground stations in both countries using one-time pad encryption, a
method regarded as virtually unbreakable. (3/20)
SpaceX Sets Nine-Day Booster
Turnaround Record (Source: SpaceFlight Now)
A Falcon 9 set a booster turnaround record with the launch of an NRO
mission. The Falcon 9 lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in
California at 2:49 a.m. Eastern Friday on the NROL-57 mission for the
National Reconnaissance Office. The first stage used for the launch
last flew just nine days ago, deploying NASA's SPHEREx and PUNCH
satellites. That is the shortest turnaround between flights of the same
booster to date. The launch was the 450th overall for the Falcon 9 and
the eighth for the NRO's proliferated satellite constellation. (3/21)
China Sets Quantum Communication
Distance Record (Source: Nature)
A Chinese satellite set a new record for quantum communications. In a
test published this week, researchers used the Jinan-1 smallsat as a
relay for laser communications between China and South Africa,
demonstrating the use of quantum key distribution over a distance of
nearly 13,000 kilometers. That technology offers the promise of
"unbreakable" encryption of messages, but terrestrially works only over
short distances in fiber optics. (3/21)
Japan's Astroscale Teams with Indian
Companies for On-Orbit Services (Source: Reuters)
Space sustainability company Astroscale is partnering with two Indian
companies. Astroscale will work with Digantara, which provides space
situational awareness services, and spacecraft propulsion company
Bellatrix Aerospace on providing on-orbit services for the Indian
government. Astroscale sees the partnership as an opportunity to grow
in the Asia-Pacific region outside of its home in Japan. (3/21)
Space Force Budget Decreases with CR (Source:
Space News)
The Space Force will have less money than requested this year because
of the continuing resolution (CR) funding the federal government. The
service will receive $28.7 billion in fiscal year 2025, less than the
$29.5 billion it requested. The reduction is linked to the CR that
Congress passed last week to fund the government at 2024 levels for the
rest of 2025, rather than pass appropriations bills for 2025. The CR
grants the Pentagon flexibility to reprogram up to $8 billion and
initiate select new programs. That includes a transfer of $30 million
from the Protected Tactical Satellite program to fund a new procurement
of Resilient GPS (R-GPS) satellites. (3/21)
ESA Strategy Aims Toward Space Autonomy
(Source: Space News)
ESA released a new strategy document with a greater emphasis on
autonomy. The Strategy 2040 document, published by ESA Thursday,
outlines five goals for the agency for the next 15 years. One of the
goals is to "strengthen European autonomy and resilience," with an
emphasis on space transportation. At a briefing Thursday, ESA Director
General Josef Aschbacher said the agency was working with member states
to revise a package of programs for this fall's ministerial meeting on
"what is required to strengthen Europe and make Europe more autonomous
and more independent," citing the changing geopolitical landsape. He
added, though, that there are no changes in ESA's cooperation with
NASA, including on the Artemis lunar exploration effort. (3/21)
Italy's 'Space Industries' Plans Daily
Minisatellite Production (Source: Space News)
A European startup has plans to mass-manufacture satellites. Space
Industries, based in Turin, Italy, has a goal of producing one
minisatellite each day by 2030. The company, founded by former Tyvak
International executive Giuseppe Santangelo, is funded by the Micelli
family, owners of the Comat Group, an Italian company that provides
energy services, facilities management and space technology. Space
Industries plans to do business with other companies and not government
agencies. (3/21)
France's CTO Teams with TDF for VLEO
Cellular Service (Source: Space News)
French satellite broadband startup Constellation Technologies &
Operations (CTO) is teaming up with a telecom company. The partnership
with TDF, which operates France's largest network of carrier-neutral
hosting sites, will examine how to test the feasibility of using
cellular frequencies from telecom partners to deliver services from
CTO's satellites in very low Earth orbit. CTO secured about $10 million
from France's state-backed Expansion Ventures fund last year toward
plans to deploy 1,500 small satellites 335 kilometers above Earth.
Satellites at this altitude could enable faster communications and
smaller user terminals compared to other constellations in LEO, but
have to contend with drag. (3/21)
Spacecraft Speedometer Promises
Precise Satellite Positioning, No GPS Required (Source: TechSpot)
The Los Alamos National Laboratory has introduced the "Spacecraft
Speedometer," a novel technology for tracking satellites in low Earth
orbit. This compact, resource-efficient device can precisely measure a
satellite's speed as it orbits the planet. Researchers believe it could
also serve as a tracking solution for deep-space missions.
Designed to provide onboard, real-time velocity measurements, the
Spacecraft Speedometer enables space agencies and commercial operators
to predict satellite positions and execute orbital maneuvers to avoid
collisions with other satellites or space debris. (3/18)
Lesbians in Space - Can Trump Save
NASA (Again)? (Source: Mike Howard - LinkedIn)
What’s the big deal with female astronauts, and does it matter that
Anne McClain is a lesbian? NASA has had mixed experiences with its
female astronauts – dating from their “first woman in Space” Sally Ride
(who didn’t “come out” as a lesbian until retiring from the agency to
write children books), to Jan Davis, Lisa Novak, Serena
Aunon-Chancellor, and most recently, Anne McClain. McClain courted
controversy when she refused to participate in the first “all-female”
space walk with astronaut Christina Koch because she (McClain) didn’t
like the fit of her space suit.
Currently, NASA has 46 active astronauts on its rolls: 14 white
females, 6 females “of color,” 11 males “of color,” and 15 “white”
males. That’s around 46 percent female, 35 percent “of color,” and 33
percent “white male.” Is that a problem? It is when you look at how
NASA got there.
Editor's Note:
This misogynist piece fails to acknowledge that a candidate's
qualifications and aptitude are the primary gate of entry. If another
candidate appears better qualified but is an asshole, does that still
make them a better choice for the job? Promoting diversity does not
equal selecting candidates who are not up to the task, it means
bringing valuably different perspectives and experiences to the
astronaut corps, and ensuring its members are an inspiration to
historically under-represented people. (3/17)
Trump Saved Our Astronauts - Can He
Save NASA? (Source: Mike Howard - LinkedIn)
When President Obama killed the Space Shuttle program without a viable
replacement, he doomed NASA to over a decade of reliance on Soviet
rockets. Time-on-station for U.S. astronauts plummeted, and rosters
dropped to pre-Shuttle lows. President Obama’s NASA slowly began
turning the taps back on, but with a difference. Command and flight
skills became secondary, first to demonstrable “equality of
opportunity,” and then to “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.”
Astronaut Class 21 of 2013 drew headlines for “the most ever” female
astronauts: four men, four women (out of 6,300 applicants). Astronaut
Class 22 of 2017 drew 18,300 applicants. Eleven astronauts made the
cut: six males and five females. The Trump/Pence administration was
able to save NASA and restore U.S. manned launch capability by putting
teeth in the toothless Obama commercial space program.
Mankind is entering a new and extremely challenging phase of space
exploration – permanent habitations on the Moon and Mars – and
exploration of gas giant moons. The Biden NASA’s commitment to “Land
the first woman and first person of color on the Moon” won’t get us
there. President Trump, Vice President Vance, and Elon Musk, can fix
this. (3/20)
No comments:
Post a Comment