First CubeSat Joins ESA's Ramses
Mission to Asteroid Apophis (Source: ESA)
The European Space Agency (ESA) has selected the first of two CubeSats
to fly onboard its proposed Rapid Apophis Mission for Space Safety
(Ramses). If approved, Ramses will rendezvous with the asteroid Apophis
before it passes exceptionally close to Earth on 13 April 2029, exactly
1500 days from today. The Ramses spacecraft will deploy two smaller
CubeSats at the asteroid to maximize the scientific return of this rare
natural phenomenon. (3/5)
AST, Kayhan, LeoLabs Team to Demo
Capability to Reduce Space Force Satellite Tracking Times
(Source: Breaking Defense)
Three commercial firms have demonstrated a collective capability to
help the Space Force more quickly detect and track satellites launched
simultaneously into low Earth orbit (LEO) — a growing launch practice
that is challenging the service’s abilities to spot potential on-orbit
crashes. AST SpaceMobile, Kayhan Space and LeoLabs provided space
situational awareness data for the five satellites launched by SpaceX
Sep. 12. (3/5)
Public Consultation Begins for New
Microlauncher Launch Site in French Guiana (Source: European
Spaceflight)
The French space agency CNES has opened a public consultation period
for the new multi-user microlauncher facility at the Guiana Space
Center in French Guiana. The consultation will focus on the site’s
environmental authorization and building permit request. On 17
February, the first of four public consultation sessions into the
construction of the new Multi-Launcher Launch Complex (ELM1) at the
Guiana Space Center was held at Kourou Town Hall. (3/5)
Bezos Brings Amazon Work Culture to
Blue Origin (Source: Ars Technica)
Jeff Bezos has moved to introduce a tough Amazon-like approach to his
rocket maker Blue Origin, as the world’s third-richest person seeks to
revive a company that has lagged behind Elon Musk’s SpaceX. The space
company’s founder and sole shareholder has pushed to shift its internal
culture with management hires from Amazon, while implementing policies
akin to the ecommerce giant, including longer working hours and more
aggressive targets.
Half a dozen current and former senior Blue Origin employees told the
Financial Times that the billionaire had taken a prominent role in
helping reset a company that has reached orbit only once, compared with
SpaceX achieving the feat more than 450 times. “The euphemism among
Blue Origin alumni is that Blue Origin’s track record speaks for
itself,” said one former executive.
Key to Bezos’s effort is chief executive Dave Limp. The former Amazon
devices chief was appointed in late 2023 and has been followed in quick
succession by several veterans from the $2.2tn tech giant, including
supply chain chief Tim Collins, chief information officer Josh
Koppelman, and chief financial officer Allen Parker. The changes in
leadership have been accompanied by severe layoffs. In February,
roughly 10 percent of Blue Origin’s more than 10,000-strong workforce
was dismissed, a more aggressive round of job cuts than at any time in
its 25-year history. (3/6)
Canada Releases New Policy –
Supplemental Mobile Coverage by Satellite (Source: SpaceQ)
Canada is a vast country that is difficult to cover with ground-based
mobile wireless services alone. But the gaps on the ground can be
covered by satellites, thus providing seamless telecom services to
Canadians wherever they are. The result: Such ‘supplemental mobile
coverage from satellites’ (SMCS) could improve the reliability of
Canada’s telecom services from coast to coast to coast. With SMCS, the
days of low bars and no coverage would be over.
To make this happen, Innovation, Science and Economic Development
Canada (ISED) has published a policy document called ‘Decision on a
Policy, Licensing and Technical Framework for Supplemental Mobile
Coverage by Satellite’. According to a February 20, 2025 ISED news
release, this new spectrum policy is a “first step” to enable wireless
service providers to offer expanded wireless services via satellites to
their subscribers. (3/5)
'Warheads on Foreheads': Top Leaders
for Air Force, Space Force Leaning into Defense Secretary's Rhetoric
(Source: Military.com)
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin wanted to make it clear: The
troops that he oversees will do whatever President Donald Trump wants
them to, and they'll be ready for it. "We have to sustain and maintain
the ability to go anytime, anywhere in the densest threat environment
and put 'warheads on foreheads' anywhere the president might want."
It wasn't just the Air Force. Gen. Chance Saltzman, the Space Force's
top leader, made it clear during his keynote speech that same evening
that Guardians are also "warfighters" who must be ready for conflict,
and the service must go on the offensive to achieve "space superiority"
against the nation's adversaries. (3/5)
Congressman Kiley Introduces Bill to
“Rein in CA Coastal Commission” After SpaceX Issue (Source:
South Tahoe Now)
Representative Kevin Kiley (R-CA) introduced the Coastal Commission
Accountability Act this week, which is meant to strip the California
Coastal Commission of its powers under federal law. Kiley’s bill would
amend the Coastal Zone Management Act to “expedite important coastal
activities, including national security initiatives, critical
infrastructure development, and disaster mitigation and recovery
efforts.”
The bill came after the Commission denied Elon Musk’s SpaceX a request
to expand Falcon 9 launches at Vandenberg Space Force Base in October.
Kiley said the Commission’s 6-4 vote against granting the SpaceX
request demonstrated the agency’s politicization, and it hinders “both
defense operations and California’s leadership in aerospace
innovation.” (3/5)
Amber McIntyre Joins AIA as Senior
Director of Civil Space (Source: Executive Gov)
Prior to joining AIA, McIntyre served as director of international
space policy at the National Space Policy Council within the Executive
Office of the Vice President, where she coordinated U.S. space policy
across agencies such as NASA, the State Department and the Department
of Defense. (3/5)
Fleet Space to Build ‘Hyper Factory’
at Australia Airport (Source: AU Manufacturing)
Satellite manufacturer and space-based mineral detection company Fleet
Space Technologies is constructing a new global headquarters and space
tech ‘hyper factory’. The 5300 square meter facility, located at
Adelaide Airport, is designed to accelerate production of Fleet’s space
technologies. In December, the company closed a major capital raising,
of $150 million, to invest in its development. (3/6)
Space Force to Establish First
Guardian Recruiting Squadron (Source: Washington Examiner)
The U.S. Space Force, the youngest of the country’s eight uniformed
services, is recruiting and will do so under its own Guardian title.
Space Force recruitment has been managed by Air Force Recruiting
Services until now. It was founded on Dec. 20, 2019, during President
Donald Trump’s first term. Now, after over five years in existence, the
branch announced it is significantly changing its recruitment process,
establishing a full Guardian squadron later in the year, according to
Air & Space Forces Magazine. (3/6)
Blue Origin Has Now Flown More Than 50
People Into Space (Source: Quartz)
Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has hit a new milestone after sending six space
tourists on a high-speed trip to the edge of space and back. The
aerospace company has now launched 50 people beyond the Kármán line.
(2/25)
Starliner Commander Says Politics Played No Role in Crew's Extended
Stay in Space (Source: CBS News)
Starliner commander Barry "Butch" Wilmore said Tuesday he did not think
politics played any role in the crew's extended mission, but he did not
directly address earlier comments by President Trump and Elon Musk that
the crew had been "abandoned" in space by the Biden administration.
(3/5)
Boeing Starliner Astronauts are Trying
to Stay Out of American Politics (Source: Quartz)
Astronauts Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Sunita “Sunny” Williams headed to
space on June 5 for an approximately eight-day mission. Now 273 days
later, they’re still orbiting around the world on the ISS and are ready
to return. But to make sure they finally get down to solid ground, it
seems like they’re trying to do everything possible to stay out of
politics and not to piss off President Trump and Elon Musk. (3/5)
NASA's Lunar Trailblazer Remains
Out-of-Contact (Source: Space News)
NASA has yet to restore communications with a lunar science mission
launched a week ago as chances for its recovery fade. Lunar Trailblazer
was a secondary payload on last week's launch of the IM-2 lunar lander
mission, but communications with the spacecraft were lost less than 12
hours after deployment. NASA says it is still working to restore
contact with and commanding of Lunar Trailblazer, currently spinning in
a "low-power state," but noted that because the spacecraft was not able
to perform scheduled maneuvers after deployment, it will not be able to
enter its planned orbit around the moon.
NASA is studying alternative approaches to get the spacecraft to the
moon if control is restored. The low-cost mission was to map the
presence of water on the moon. It is part of a NASA line of small
planetary missions that have suffered failures or other problems. (3/6)
Firefly Alpha Launch Planned for March
15 at California Spaceport (Source: Firefly)
Firefly announced a mid-March date for its next Alpha launch. The
company said Wednesday the sixth flight of Alpha is scheduled for no
earlier than the morning of March 15. The rocket is carrying a Lockheed
Martin LM 400 satellite on a technology demonstration mission. This
will be the first Alpha launch since a flight last July carrying a set
of NASA-sponsored cubesats. (3/6)
How Elon Musk Muscled His Way Into the
FAA (Source: Bloomberg)
Two weeks ago, SpaceX engineer Ted Malaska showed up at the Federal
Aviation Administration’s headquarters in Washington to deliver what he
described as a directive from his boss Elon Musk: The agency will
immediately start work on a program to deploy thousands of the
company’s Starlink satellite terminals to support the national airspace
system.
Malaska told those in attendance that the employees had up to 18 months
to get the new program up and running, an unsettling timeline for
aviation safety employees accustomed to a more deliberate pace. Anyone
who impeded progress, Malaska said, would be reported to Musk and
risked losing their jobs, according to two people familiar with the
matter. (3/5)
Musk Wants SpaceX To Fix Air Traffic
Control. Here’s Why It Won’t Work (Source: Forbes)
Musk's invasion of the FAA creates obvious and serious conflicts of
interests, with DOGE currently burrowing into the agency that acts as
SpaceX’s primary regulator. But worse, it makes no sense. Starlink may
be suitable to connect remote FAA facilities, but it doesn’t currently
have the bandwidth or reliability to serve as the backbone of the
agency’s nationwide communications network. Plus, SpaceX has no
apparent experience in serving as a prime contractor for a solution
incorporating a mix of communications technologies.
“As a backup layer or alternative connectivity provider, Starlink makes
sense,” Kim Burke, a government affairs analyst at the consultancy
Quilty Space, told Forbes. “But SpaceX spearheading a total overhaul of
the FAA’s terrestrial networks? Not a chance.”
High among the concerns: FAA will have to do substantial testing on the
time it takes for Starlink signals to travel, known as latency, said
Hassan Shahidi, CEO of the Flight Safety Foundation. “You don't want to
have a disruption or slowness in your network with safety critical
systems. We're talking about real-time information that air traffic
control needs.” (3/5)
SpaceX Denies Intent to Take Over FAA
Contract (Source: Reuters)
SpaceX is denying claims that the company is seeking to take over an
FAA contract for air traffic communications. In a statement Wednesday,
SpaceX said it is working with L3Harris and the FAA on ways to upgrade
communications networks linking air traffic control centers by using
its Starlink satellite system. It rejected reports that SpaceX was
trying to take over a $2.4 billion contract previously awarded to
Verizon to perform those upgrades, leveraging the influence SpaceX CEO
Elon Musk has with the Trump administration. (3/6)
India's Second Spaceport Under
Construction (Source: ETV Bharat)
Construction has started on a second Indian spaceport. A ceremony
Wednesday marked the start of work on a launch site at
Kulasekaranpattinam in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The
launch site, expected to take two years to build, will support launches
of India's Small Satellite Launch Vehicle (SSLV) to polar orbits. It
will increase the SSLV's payload capacity to those orbits by launching
directly to the south, avoiding a dogleg maneuver required for launches
from the Satish Dhawan Space Center. (3/6)
NASA Shutting Off Voyager Instrument (Source:
NASA)
NASA is shutting off instruments on the two Voyager spacecraft to
conserve power. The cosmic ray subsystem instrument on Voyager 1 was
shut off last week and the low-energy charged particle instrument on
Voyager 2 will be turned off later this month, NASA announced
Wednesday. The shutdowns will conserve power on the spacecraft as their
aging radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs) generate less
power. Each spacecraft will now have three functioning instruments as
they speed out of the solar system, with hopes that both can continue
to operate with at least one working instrument into the 2030s. (3/6)
Golden Dome Will Require Massive
Effort (Source: Space News)
A Space Force general says the Golden Dome missile-defense program will
require a level of effort comparable to the Manhattan Project. Gen.
Michael Guetlein, vice chief of space operations of the U.S. Space
Force, said Golden Dome represents a significant challenge that demands
unprecedented collaboration across defense and intelligence agencies.
He said Wednesday that the service is in "full planning mode" on its
role in Golden Dome, and will provide its thoughts to the White House
by the end of the month. The Space Force will play a crucial role due
to its space-based capabilities, but Guetlein said which organization
will lead Golden Dome has yet to be determined. (3/6)
U.S. Space Force Could Link Missile
Sensing Satellites In Multiple Orbits (Source: Aviation Week)
The U.S. Space Force may eventually connect missile warning and
tracking satellites in low and medium Earth orbits (MEO), uniting
constellations being separately developed by the Space Systems Center
and Space Development Agency (SDA), an acquisition official said on
March 4. (3/6)
Silicon Valley Companies Disrupt
Defense Industry (Source: Space News)
Silicon Valley looks to follow SpaceX's lead into upending the defense
sector. Industry executives see an opportunity for Silicon Valley's
biggest players, like Palantir and Anduril, to challenge traditional
prime contractors across defense and space programs. Those companies
have found some success with efforts like AI-powered drones, but
executives noted that the defense industry is as much about
bureaucratic navigation as it is about innovation. Those
executives added they did not see their companies toppling current
defense primes like Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman in
the near future, saying that it's "a question for 10 or 20 years from
now." (3/6)
AST SpaceMobile and Vodafone Plan
European Collaboration for Direct-to-Smartphone Services
(Source: Space News)
AST SpaceMobile is planning to create a jointly owned European
satellite operator for direct-to-smartphone services. The company
announced a partnership with European telecom giant Vodafone, which was
already set to provide the cellular spectrum needed to launch its
services in 10 countries and ultimately aims to extend coverage across
the entire continent.
The agreement lays the groundwork for a network of gateways essential
to integrating satellites with more terrestrial mobile networks, paving
the way to expand partnerships to three times as many countries. The
move underscores a broader trend in Europe toward securing independent
space-based capabilities, particularly in the face of rising
geopolitical tensions and regulatory scrutiny over foreign satellite
operators. (3/6)
Israel's SatixFy Wins UK Funding for
Satellite Software (Source: Space News)
Israeli chipmaker SatixFy won U.K. Space Agency funding to develop
software for reprogrammable satellites. The £1.8 million ($2.3 million)
program aims to advance digital beamforming software over the next two
years, which the company said would enable real-time control and
monitoring of satellite payloads powered by its chips. It would
eliminate the downtime that software-defined payloads suffer when
reconfigured, and could enable AI systems to automatically reconfigure
payloads based on used demand without intervention from ground
controllers. (3/6)
China Says it is ‘Ready for War’ with
America (Source: The Telegraph)
China has said it is “ready for war” with America as it raises defense
spending and imposes retaliatory tariffs on US imports. In a direct
threat to Donald Trump, China’s representatives in America said: “If
war is what the US wants, be it a tariff war, a trade war or any other
type of war, we’re ready to fight until the end.”
The US has hit China with 20 per cent tariffs in response to what the
White House considers to be Chinese inaction over the flow of fentanyl,
a synthetic opioid, into America. Beijing has responded by
announcing plans to boost defense spending by 7.2 percent and hit the
US with reciprocal tariffs of 10-15 percent on certain imports. (3/5)
Another Starlink Trump Windfall for
Musk? (Source: Prospect)
Starlink could elbow its way into the $42.5 billion Biden-era program
to build out broadband internet service in underserved areas.
Starlink’s satellite service did not initially meet reliability
standards for the program, nor did it commit to a low-cost option for
low-income users. Starlink service starts at $120 a month, which is
substantially more than the average broadband bill.
But the Trump administration could rewrite the rules to let Starlink
participate more fully in the program, and compete with the more
prominent wired fiber-optic service. Only three states—Louisiana,
Delaware, and Nevada—have finalized their broadband funding. “Most of
the other states can bid under different rules with this government and
shift funding to Starlink,” said Alejandro Molina, a former National
Economic Council official under President Biden. (3/5)
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