Fram2 Astronaut Mission's West Coast
Splashdown Opens New Era for SpaceX (Source: Space.com)
The West Coast is the best coast for Dragon landings, at least in
SpaceX's books. The company's four-person Fram2 mission came to a
successful end on Friday (April 4) with the splashdown of the Crew
Dragon capsule "Resilience" off the coast of Southern California. That
was a first for SpaceX, geography-wise: All 16 of its previous
astronaut missions had hit the water off Florida, either in the
Atlantic Ocean or in the Gulf of Mexico.
The decision was spurred by the fact that debris from Dragon's
expendable trunk section had been found on terra firma on multiple
occasions, even though modeling work had suggested the trunk would
fully burn up during reentry to Earth's atmosphere. Moving splashdowns
to the West Coast — along with jettisoning the trunk after Dragon's
deorbit burn, to control the trunk's trajectory — will ensure that no
debris could harm people or property, according to SpaceX; any that
survives reentry will fall into the Pacific. (4/5)
SpaceX Launches 28 Starlink Satellites
to Orbit From Florida's Space Coast (Source: Space.com)
SpaceX sent another big batch of its Starlink internet satellites to
orbit from Florida on Saturday night. A Falcon 9 rocket carrying 28
Starlink craft lifted off from the Cape Canaveral Spaceport. About
eight minutes after launch, the rocket's first stage came back to Earth
for a landing on the SpaceX drone ship "Just Read the Instructions."
(4/6)
Rocket Lab’s Shot at $10b of Space
Force Funds (Source: Stuff)
Kiwi space pioneer Sir Peter Beck’s Rocket Lab has had the path opened
to big military contracts with the US Pentagon worth up to $10 billion,
so what does it mean? The company is one of five chosen as the Pentagon
looks to carry out 30 launches in the next few years.
Rocket Lab said it had been selected by the US Space Force to compete
for “the Department of Defense’s highest-priority national security
missions for its National Security Space Launch (NSSL) Phase 3 Lane 1
program”. The Space Force contract is valued at $5.6 billion over five
years and the program plans to award a minimum of 30 missions through
to 2029, with potential for an extension until 2034, according to
Rocket Lab. (4/5)
New NASA Ohio License Plate to be
Available Next Week (Source: Spectrum News)
Space lovers looking to showcase that passion on their vehicles are in
luck. A new specialty license plate will be available for purchase
starting tentatively on April 9. According to a release from the
center, it features the NASA logo and the words NASA Glenn Research
Center. The plate will be $10 more than a regular one. The money will
not go to NASA. (4/5)
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