Russian Satellite at Center of Nuclear
Weapons Allegations is Spinning Out of Control, Analysts Say
(Source: Guardian)
A secretive Russian satellite in space that US officials believe is
connected to a nuclear anti-satellite weapons program has appeared to
be spinning uncontrollably, suggesting it may no longer be functioning.
The Cosmos 2553 satellite, launched by Russia weeks before invading
Ukraine in 2022, has had various bouts of what appears to be errant
spinning over the past year, according to Doppler radar data from
space-tracking firm LeoLabs and optical data from Slingshot Aerospace.
Believed to be a radar satellite for Russian intelligence as well as a
radiation testing platform, the satellite last year became the center
of US allegations that Russia for years has been developing a nuclear
weapon capable of destroying entire satellite networks, such as
SpaceX’s vast Starlink internet system that Ukrainian troops have been
using. (4/26)
Hegseth Dismisses Members of Key DoD
Advisory Boards (Source: Wall Street Journal)
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has discharged members of Pentagon
advisory boards on defense policy and military technology, adding to
the upheaval during his time at the Pentagon, current and former
officials said. In a memo explaining the dismissals at the Defense
Policy Board, the Defense Science Board and other advisory panels,
Hegseth wrote that the Pentagon requires “fresh thinking to drive bold
changes.” (4/25)
Satellite Scans of the Deepest Lunar
Craters Reveal Alarming Results for Future Moon Colonies
(Source: Daily Galaxy)
A new analysis of satellite scans from the deepest lunar craters has
led to some surprising and chilling results that could dramatically
impact future moon colonization plans. Researchers from the University
of Hawaii at Mānoa and their partners have re-examined data from the
ShadowCam aboard the Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter (KPLO) and have
revised earlier estimates of water ice deposits found in the Moon’s
permanently shadowed regions (PSRs). The scans reveal significantly
fewer ice deposits than initially believed, which could pose a
challenge for future lunar colonies that rely on local resources. (4/26)
Astrotech Wins Space Force Contract to
Expand Processing Capacity at California Spaceport (Source:
USSF)
The Space Force Space Systems Command (SSC) awarded a $77.5 million
National Security Space Launch (NSSL) Space Vehicle (SV) Processing
Commercial Solutions Opening (CSO) contract to Astrotech Space
Operations (ASO) to expand commercial SV processing capacity for NSSL
missions at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California by 2028. (4/25)
NASA Administrator Was Once Arrested,
Accused of Passing Bad Checks to Casinos (Source: Reuters)
President Donald Trump's nominee for NASA administrator, Jared
Isaacman, was arrested on fraud charges in 2010 and faced lawsuits in
two states for writing $2 million in bad checks to casinos, according
to government records and court filings.
Isaacman is a billionaire pilot and astronaut who founded the Shift4
Payments company as a teenager and commanded the first civilian space
crew in 2021 aboard a SpaceX capsule. (4/25)
California Fraudster Duped Investors
with Lies About Space Business (Source: Mercury News)
Ramesh Nathan told investors his Bay Area spacecraft company had seven
offices around the world, employed more than 15,000 people, and
generated $30 billion in profit in a single quarter. But, according to
the indictment that just led to his fraud conviction, the company had
no offices, no workers and no revenue. A jury on Thursday found Nathan,
43, found guilty of fraud and money laundering after an eight-day trial.
In 2016 and 2017, and possibly earlier, Nathan took about $50,000 from
six investors, including U.S. military veterans, his indictment said.
He reeled them in with false promises that his San Francisco-based
Relativity Research Fund was involved in development of interstellar
space travel technology, prototype spacecraft, combustion-free
propulsion systems, cutting-edge robotics, and other innovations, the
indictment said. (4/25)
Reaction Dynamics Wins Million-Dollar
Investment (Source: SpaceQ)
Canadian launch and propulsion startup Reaction Dynamics (RDX) scored a
big win last week. Not just figuratively, but literally: after
competing in several rounds of Tim Draper’s startup pitch reality show,
Meet The Drapers, Reaction Dynamics emerged triumphant in the finals,
with a million-dollar investment from Draper’s venture capital firm.
(4/25)
Colorado Springs-Based Space
Foundation Teams Up with International Space University (Source:
The Gazette)
As space industry leaders sounded a call to action this month to
address growing gaps in the United States space workforce, some
industry giants are already leading the charge. Colorado Springs-based
Space Foundation, through its Space Workforce for Tomorrow initiative,
and International Space University, headquartered near Strasbourg,
France, have teamed up to advance space education and address workforce
needs in the American space industry, according to a joint news release
this week. (4/25)
Tesla Takedown Group Takes Victory Lap
and Aims for Starlink and SpaceX (Source: Teslarati)
The Tesla Takedown movement has taken a victory lap following the
release of the electric vehicle maker’s first quarter 2025 earnings.
With the group feeling encouraged by its results with the EV maker,
Tesla Takedown is now setting its sights at Elon Musk’s other ventures,
such as Starlink and SpaceX. Because high-speed and reliable satellite
internet for people in remote areas and the most affordable spaceflight
provider for the United States need to be damaged, it seems.
Despite its name, Tesla Takedown is really more like an anti-Elon Musk
group. Thus, it was no surprise that in a statement, the group noted
that it is now setting its sights on Musk’s other ventures. As per
Tesla Takedown, it is already making preparations for similar efforts
against the CEO’s other ventures, such as SpaceX and Starlink. “Tesla
Takedown has already started laying the groundwork to expand Tesla
Takedown efforts to target other Musk businesses including SpaceX,
Starlink, X and xAI,” the Tesla Takedown group noted. (4/25)
Booz Allen, Meta Test ‘Space Llama’ AI
System On Space Station (Source: Aviation Week)
Booz Allen Hamilton and Meta have deployed their “Space Llama”
artificial intelligence (AI) system to the International Space Station
(ISS). A test of Space Llama 3.2, conducted on April 24, verified the
system as “fully functional” and showed it had a Technology Readiness
Level of 8. (4/25)
Space Perspective's Balloon Dreams
Deflate (Source: Travel Weekly)
Space Perspective, a space tour operator that planned to use a
high-altitude balloon to send people to the edge of space, appears to
have ceased operations after being evicted from a Florida airport.
According to court records, the company owed $90,295 in unpaid rent to
the Titusville-Cocoa Airport Authority, which oversees Space Coast
Regional Airport in Titusville, where Space Perspective leased three
properties, including a hangar.
After failing to pay rent, the company was evicted in March. Although
Space Perspective's website remains operational and appears to still
accept bookings, the company's telephone number has been disconnected
and the company has not posted on its social media pages since
December. Interim CEO Michael Savage did not respond to Travel Weekly
inquiries. (4/25)
Weapons of War are Launching From Cape
Canaveral for the First Time Since 1988 (Source: Ars Technica)
The Army's Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon fired out of a canister on a
road-mobile trailer shortly after sunrise on Florida's Space Coast,
then headed east over the Atlantic Ocean propelled by a solid-fueled
rocket booster. This missile launch and a similar one in December are
the first tests of land-based offensive weapons at Cape Canaveral since
1988, when the military last tested Pershing ballistic missiles there.
The launch range in Florida continues to support offshore tests of
submarine-launched Trident missiles, and now is a center for hypersonic
missile testing. (4/25)
Musk Sat in on Job Interview for Air
Force’s Top Civilian (Source: Breaking Defense)
SpaceX founder Elon Musk was present at President Donald Trump’s
interview of his Air Force Secretary nominee Troy Meink, confirmed
Meink in written responses to Sen. Elizabeth Warren obtained by
Breaking Defense.
Musk was “one of many” people present at the meeting and only Trump
directed questions toward the nominee, Meink stated. However, the
disclosure could raise further concerns about Meink’s ties to SpaceX
and Musk after Reuters reported in February — citing seven people
familiar with the matter — that Musk had recommended Meink for the job
after Meink helped push a multi-billion dollar satellite contract
toward SpaceX. (4/25)
New Study: There Are Lots of Icy
Super-Earths (Source: Ars Technica)
What does the "typical" exosolar system look like? We know it's not
likely to look like our own Solar System, given that our familiar
planets don't include entire classes of planets (Hot Jupiters!
Mini-Neptunes!) that we've found elsewhere. And our discovery methods
have been heavily biased toward planets that orbit close to their host
star, so we don't really have a strong sense of what might be lurking
in more distant orbits.
A new study released on Thursday describes a search for what are called
"microlensing" events, where a planet acts as a gravitational lens that
magnifies the star it's orbiting, causing it to brighten briefly. These
events are difficult to capture, but can potentially indicate the
presence of planets in more distant orbits. The researchers behind the
new work find indications that there's a significant population of
rocky super-Earths that are traveling in orbits similar to that of
Jupiter and Saturn. (4/25)
New Analysis Casts Doubt on
'Biosignatures' Found on Planet K2-18b (Source: NPR)
Astronomers have been poring over last week's claim of the detection of
life-associated gases in the atmosphere of a distant planet named
K2-18b — "the strongest evidence yet that life may exist on a planet
outside our solar system," as a University of Cambridge press release
put it. But already, one independent check suggests the announcement
was overhyped.
Jake Taylor of the University of Oxford, who studies the atmospheres of
far-away planets with the James Webb Space Telescope, did a quick
reanalysis of the starlight filtering through K2-18b's atmosphere. He
used a simple method to look for the tell-tale signals of gas molecules
of any kind.
He was "agnostic" in his approach, and did not look specifically for
the exciting sulfur-based gases that, on Earth, are primarily
associated with life-forms such as marine microbes. "I wanted to not
'assume' what molecules would be in the atmosphere," Taylor told NPR in
an email. "I directly analyzed the transmission spectrum that they
analyzed, in order to have a similar comparison." The results he got
suggested that there's too much noise in the data to draw any
conclusions. (4/25)
China Reveals the Foreign Scientists
Awarded Rare Lunar Samples (Source: Science)
Seven institutions in six countries will gain access to tiny shares of
the lunar material. Notably, two institutions in the United States are
getting samples, even though Chinese researchers have not been able to
access NASA’s Moon samples because of restrictions imposed by the U.S.
Congress. CNSA issued a call for proposals from internationally led
groups to use the Chang’e-5 samples in August 2023, drawing two dozen
applications from 11 countries and international organizations. (4/24)
Firefly Aerospace to Launch Lockheed
Martin LM400 Tech Demo Satellite on Alpha Rocket From California
(Source: SpaceFlight Now)
A perfect storm of range restrictions and suboptimal weather seems to
finally be clearing for Firefly Aerospace. After delaying the flight of
their sixth Alpha rocket for more than a month, the company announced a
new launch window, which opens on Sunday. Onboard the rocket,
designated FLTA006 by Firefly Aerospace, is a technology demonstration
for Lockheed Martin’s LM400 satellite bus. (4/26)
Blue Origin Test Fires Second Stage
and Continues Preparations for New Glenn’s Second Flight
(Source: NSF)
Blue Origin recently test-fired the second stage for New Glenn’s second
flight, while other preparations for this and other future flights are
underway at the company’s facilities in Florida. The second stage’s
test firing is one of a number of steps that must be completed before
the rocket’s second flight, currently thought to be around the middle
of this year. The second stage, also known as Glenn Stage 2 (GS2), was
erected at Launch Complex 36 at the Cape Canaveral Spaceport on April
21. (4/25)
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