Japan’s iQPS Lines Up Eight SAR
Launches (Source: Space News)
Japan’s Institute for Q-shu Pioneers of Space, iQPS, plans to launch
eight additional synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellites through the
end of 2026. Rocket Lab, the U.S. launch provider that sent QPS-SAR-10
into orbit on May 17, is on contract to launch the next iQPS satellite
no earlier than June. Including that flight, four more iQPS missions
will fly in 2025. (5/19)
Space Force FORGEing Ahead with
Missile Warning Ground System (Source: Breaking Defense)
The Space Force is moving to finally put in place the long-troubled
next-generation ground system for its missile warning constellations —
with service officials now predicting the Future Operationally
Resilient Ground Evolution (FORGE) command and control (C2) system to
be fully functioning in 2028. Space Systems Command (SSC) in recent
weeks has issued a flurry of contracts for the key hardware and
software “thrusts” that make up the FORGE program, following a
restructuring in 2023 that broke the effort into more manageable
pieces. (5/19)
From GPS to Weather Forecasts: the
Hidden Ways Australia Relies on Foreign Satellites (Source:
Space Daily)
You have probably used space at least 20 times today. Satellites let
you buy a coffee with your phone, book a rideshare, navigate your way
to meet someone, and check the weather. Satellites are also essential
for monitoring floods, cyclones and bushfires, and supporting the
people they affect. Farmers depend on satellite data, too, as does
everyone trying to understand and tackle climate change, not to mention
our military.
Yet Australia's access to space services depends almost entirely on
satellites owned and run by foreign governments and companies. In an
increasingly uncertain world, having our own sovereign space technology
is becoming even more important for security. According to Australia's
2024 National Defence Strategy, space capabilities are "equally as
important as the maritime, land and air domains". But we are in many
respects simply users of space infrastructure that belongs to partner
countries for our military needs. (5/15)
China's Queqiao-2 Satellite Ready for
Global Lunar Mission Support (Source: Space Daily)
Queqiao-2, China's dedicated relay satellite for lunar landing
missions, is now poised to support both domestic and international
lunar exploration efforts, according to the Deep Space Exploration
Laboratory. First launched in March 2024, Queqiao-2, also known as
Magpie Bridge 2, played a critical role in the Chang'e 6 mission, which
successfully retrieved samples from the far side of the moon. The
satellite has been in stable operation for 14 months, conducting
scientific observations and providing crucial communication support for
Earth-moon missions. (5/20)
OroraTech Secures Euro-37M (Source:
Space Daily)
OroraTech has expanded its Series B funding round to euro 37 million,
with significant support from BNP Paribas Solar Impulse Venture Fund
and Rabo Ventures, alongside continued backing from Bayern Kapital,
Edaphon, and the European Circular Bioeconomy Fund (ECBF). With a fleet
of ten satellites already operational, OroraTech provides the most
continuous and extensive thermal data stream available, empowering the
creation of a digital wildfire twin of the Earth. This advanced system
offers 24/7 global wildfire monitoring and future fire behavior
simulation, transforming raw thermal data into actionable insights.
(5/19)
Satellite Firms Brace for Potential
Imagery Budget Cuts in 2026 (Source: Space News)
The National Reconnaissance Office has privately warned its commercial
satellite imagery providers of potential funding cuts that could slash
as much as one-third from the previously projected $450 million
commercial imagery budget for the upcoming fiscal year, industry and
congressional sources told SpaceNews.
The issue came to light last week during a House Armed Services
Committee hearing when Rep. Seth Moulton (D-MA), ranking member on the
Strategic Forces subcommittee, referenced “rumors” that the NRO had
been directed by the White House Office of Management and Budget to
scale back commercial imagery funding in its upcoming budget request.
(5/20)
Spinning in the Black: The Satellite
Data System and Real-Time Reconnaissance (Source: Space Review)
A key element in the NRO’s creation of a real-time reconnaissance
capability a half-century ago was the development of dedicated data
relay satellites. Dwayne Day examines the Satellite Data System program
and its unusual management approach. Click here.
(5/20)
An Asteroid’s Threatened Impact May
Still Impact Planetary Defense (Source: Space Review)
For a time early this year, a near Earth asteroid had a small but
growing chance of hitting the Earth in 2032. That risk is now gone,
Jeff Foust reports, but it has people talking about planetary defense
and how to support NASA’s efforts there. Click here.
(5/20)
Space Mining: Corporate Autocracy or
Global Solidarity? (Source: Space Review)
The international community continues to debate how utilization of
space resources should be regulated and managed. Nikola Schmidt and
Martin Švec ague that failing to act opens the door to companies having
their own way, to the detriment to humanity in general. Click here.
(5/20)
Opportunities for New Zealand as
Geopolitics Reshapes the Space Economy (Source: Space Review)
Discussions about a new space race have focused on a competition
between China and the United States, but other nations can play roles
as well. Three authors discuss how New Zealand could leverage its
unique position in geopolitics to grow its space activities. Click here.
(5/20)
The Universe Will Decay a Lot Sooner
than Expected (Source: 404 Media)
Bad news for anyone who was hoping to live to the ripe old age of 1078
years. It turns out that the universe might decay into nothingness
around that time, which is much sooner than previous estimates of
cosmic death in about 101100 years. Long-lived stellar remnants, like
white dwarfs and black holes, will slowly evaporate through a process
called Hawking radiation on a more accelerated timeline, according to
the study, which also estimates that a human body would take about 1090
years to evaporate through this process (sorry, would-be exponent
nonagenarians). (5/17)
Labor, Not Trade, Must Be Aerospace’s
Top Concern (Source: Aviation Week)
The turmoil over tariffs that has engulfed global trade brings with it
a little-discussed risk for the aerospace industry that could have a
far more lasting impact than inflationary pressures or supply chain
disruptions: failure to focus on the sector’s production crisis.
One of the main causes of aircraft-makers’ inability to deliver their
products is a labor and skill shortage. This crisis in the commercial
aerospace industry is unlike any it has faced. Other crises were ones
of demand. The only way out of this crisis of supply is to expand, not
cut. The supply chain needs to adapt and grow. Because less experienced
workers are not as skilled as the senior ones they replaced,
productivity has eroded. To maintain the same level of output,
workforces need to grow to compensate for the lower efficiency. (5/16)
Rocketing Toward Monopoly (Source:
American Prospect)
The federal government’s reliance on SpaceX started well before the
Trump administration, and for good reason. SpaceX rockets have proved
efficient, reusable, and cost-effective. SpaceX enjoyed $3.8 billion in
federal contracts in 2024, the last year of the Biden administration.
But critics, including those inside the Department of Defense, have
sounded the alarm on the increasing dominance of a single company.
“Heaven forbid we have a mishap with a Falcon 9 launch,” Col. Richard
Kniseley, an officer in the Space Force’s Commercial Space Office, told
The New York Times last year. “That means it is grounded, right? And
that means we could be without launch.” Kniseley’s concern is just one
among many related to SpaceX dominating the full range of space
services.
Hal Singer, a professor of economics at the University of Utah, has
even more concerns. Singer’s tally of anti-competitive SpaceX actions
includes corporate predation, barrier-to-entry protectionism,
exclusionary contracting, and more. Meanwhile, two competitors of
note—Jim Cantrell of Phantom Space and Peter Beck of Rocket Lab—have
both publicly disclosed actions that SpaceX has taken to undercut their
growth. (5/19)
NASA Continues Building Next-Gen Roman
Space Telescope Despite Budget Worries (Source: Space.com)
NASA engineers have successfully completed testing on one half of the
Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope — a key step in making sure this
future observatory will perform as expected once it reaches space.
"This milestone tees us up to attach the flight solar array sun shield
to the outer barrel assembly, and deployable aperture cover, which
we'll begin this month," said Jack Marshall, who leads integration and
testing for these Roman Space Telescope elements at NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center. (5/16)
New Strain of Bacteria Found on
China’s Tiangong Space Station (Source: SCMP)
Chinese scientists have discovered a new microbe that developed on
board the county’s Tiangong space station, according to a new study.
The strain, officially named niallia tiangongensis, is a new variant of
a previously known terrestrial bacteria and was found on a cabin in the
space station. The discovery was announced by researchers from the
Shenzhou Space Biotechnology Group and the Beijing Institute of
Spacecraft System Engineering. (5/17)
NASA Satellite Images Could Provide
Early Volcano Warnings (Source: NASA)
Scientists know that changing tree leaves can indicate when a nearby
volcano is becoming more active and might erupt. In a new collaboration
between NASA and the Smithsonian Institution, scientists now believe
they can detect these changes from space.
As volcanic magma ascends through the Earth’s crust, it releases carbon
dioxide and other gases which rise to the surface. Trees that take up
the carbon dioxide become greener and more lush. These changes are
visible in images from NASA satellites such as Landsat 8, along with
airborne instruments flown as part of the Airborne Validation Unified
Experiment: Land to Ocean (AVUELO). (5/15)
A Crucial System of Ocean Currents is
Slowing. It’s Already Supercharging Sea Level Rise in the US
(Source: CNN)
Flooding on the US Northeast coast has risen significantly as a
critical network of Atlantic Ocean currents weakens, according to a new
study — an alarming glimpse into the future as some scientists warn the
current system could be just decades from collapse. The Atlantic
Meridional Overturning Circulation, known as the AMOC, works like a
vast conveyor belt, transporting heat, salt and freshwater through the
ocean and influencing climate, weather and sea levels around the
planet. (5/16)
Can We Actually Build a Thriving
Economy On and Around the Moon? (Source: Space.com)
Cislunar space — the region extending from our planet to the moon — is
getting a lot of attention these days, as more and more spacecraft make
their way to Earth's nearest neighbor. But what needs to happen to help
spark a true cislunar economy? And, given actions of late here on
Earth, are we headed for a tariff-free cislunar zone?
There's a lot of hard work ahead to put in place the needed hardware to
sustain and define such a dollar-generating idea, experts say, but we
at least have some ideas about how to get started. Click here.
(5/17)
ispace Secures $35 Million in Bank
Financing (Source: ispace)
ispace announced a resolution has been made by its Board of Directors
to secure approximately $35 Million in new financing as part of a loan
agreement with Mizuho Bank, Ltd. The loan is intended to secure working
capital for development of mission and other related expenses. (5/13)
Thousands of Teachers Protest
Trump-Musk Cuts Outside SpaceX in California (Source: City News
Service)
A sea of protesters gathered outside Elon Musk's SpaceX rocket
manufacturing and testing facility in Hawthorne Saturday to show
opposition to federal budget cuts threatening special education and
meal programs and a move to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education.
Signs proclaimed the educators were "Ready to fight" the cuts ordered
by President Donald Trump and Musk's Department of Government
Efficiency (DOGE) were at the rally. (5/17)
The Challenges Facing Elon Musk and
NASA in Sending Humans to Mars (Source: CNBC)
In Musk’s view, going to Mars is tantamount to preserving humanity and
escaping the ever-growing threats to Earth, including natural disasters
and warfare. For scientists, Mars offers possible answers to questions
such as the prevalence and diversity of life in the universe.
“The Mars landing problem is complicated. The transit problem, super
complicated. You know, the radiation environment is very severe. The
life support problem. The reliability has to be super high,” said Amit
Kshatriya, deputy associate administrator of the Moon to Mars Program
at NASA. Click here.
(5/17)
SatVu’s Thermal Imaging Satellite
Winning Over Customers Despite Early Setback (Source: Space News)
British startup SatVu is proving that even a short-lived satellite
mission can yield big business opportunities in the competitive
remote-sensing sector. Despite the premature failure of its first
thermal imaging satellite after just six months in orbit, the company
has already signed up ~$6 million in pre-order customers for its next
satellite scheduled to launch later this year. (5/19)
China Readies Asteroid/Comet Mission
(Source: Space News)
China is set to launch a mission to an asteroid and a comet next week.
The Tianwen-2 spacecraft is expected to launch on a Long March 3B
during a four-hour window that opens at 12 p.m. Eastern May 28, with
backup opportunities the next two days. Tianwen-2's first goal is to
collect samples from near-Earth asteroid 469219 Kamo'oalewa and deliver
them to Earth in late 2027. The spacecraft will then head to the comet
311P/PANSTARRS, arriving in early 2035. The mission aims to advance
China's planetary exploration capabilities, provide new insights into
the understanding of small planetary bodies and their evolution and
potentially for planetary defense and the origins of life. (5/20)
Scientists Want NASA to Repurpose Probes From Canceled Janus Mission (Source: Space News)
Scientists are asking NASA to take action on a proposal to repurpose an
asteroid mission. NASA canceled the Janus mission to fly by binary
asteroids in 2023, putting the twin smallsats into storage. Those
spacecraft could instead be used to visit the asteroid Apophis before
that asteroid makes a very close, but harmless, flyby of Earth in 2029.
In a statement summarizing a conference held last month about the
Apophis flyby, scientists called on NASA to act on responses to a
request for information the agency issued last fall exploring that
potential reuse of the Janus spacecraft. NASA has not commented on its
plans for Janus, but the agency noted at a hearing last week that the
OSIRIS-APEX mission, which will arrive at Apophis after the Earth
flyby, will be able to observe the asteroid at a distance before the
flyby as well. (5/20)
Seraphim Picks 10 Companies for Space
Accelerator (Source: Space News)
Seraphim Space has selected 10 companies for its next space-focused
accelerator program. The 15th round of the accelerator program,
announced Monday, includes startups from five countries, including the
first to participate from Mongolia. Those startups are aiming to
support services ranging from defense communications to artificial
intelligence-powered surveillance. The three-month program is designed
to make the startups investor-ready. (5/20)
Sophia Raises $3.5 Million for Orbital
Compute and Data Centers (Source: Space News)
Sophia Space raised $3.5 million in pre-seed funding to develop
orbiting compute and data centers. The company believes its modular
data centers will be particularly useful for intelligence gathering,
disaster monitoring and disaster management. The company aims to
provide the capability to do on-orbit processing of satellite data,
"dramatically reducing" the time to get actionable insights from it.
Unlock Venture Partners led the Sophia Space investment round with
participation from angel investors and industry leaders. (5/20)
Border Focus Could Shift IC Space
Resources (Source: Space News)
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said the United States
will redirect its intelligence collection efforts toward border
security. Speaking at the GEOINT 2025 Symposium Monday, Gabbard
outlined how the Trump administration's national security priorities
will reshape the work of the nation's 18 intelligence agencies, placing
unprecedented emphasis on domestic border surveillance while
maintaining America's global intelligence capabilities.
The shift would affect thousands of intelligence professionals across
the geospatial intelligence sector. Gabbard also said her office would
work to streamline contracts across intelligence agencies and make more
use of commercial solutions and open-source intelligence. (5/20)
NATO Members to Invest More in Space (Source:
Space News)
NATO members plan to invest more in defense, including space
technologies. At the June NATO summit in the Netherlands, allies will
outline specific capabilities to contribute to the alliance, said U.K.
Royal Marines Maj. Gen. Paul Lynch, NATO deputy assistant secretary
general for intelligence. Space technology is an important component of
NATO's modernization campaign, he said at GEOINT Monday, citing two
promising space-related programs: Allied Persistent Surveillance from
Space, which is aimed at ensuring NATO can collect data on any location
at any given time, and the Strategic Space Situational Awareness System
for NATO Headquarters. (5/20)
SatVu Committed to Thermal Imaging
(Source: Space News)
SatVu said it has strong interest in its thermal imaging capabilities
despite the premature end of its first satellite. The British company's
HotSat-1 satellite failed after six months in orbit, but the thermal
imagery it provided has generated $6 million in pre-orders for its
HotSat-2 spacecraft. SatVu is carving a niche in high-resolution
mid-wave infrared sensing, with the ability to detect heat signatures
as small as 3.5 meters. SatVu has signed agreements with U.S. defense
contractors involved in the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency's
Luno program, which aims to integrate commercial satellite data into
government intelligence workflows. (5/20)
South Korea's SI Imaging Plans
On-Orbit Satellite Leasing (Source: Space News)
South Korean company SI Imaging is allowing customers to lease its
satellite as well as buy images. The company launched the 650-kilogram
SpaceEye-T satellite in March, and the satellite will be able to
provide imagery at resolutions as sharp as 25 centimeters. Customers
will have the ability to take control of the satellite, choosing what
to observe and when. SI Imaging Services plans to follow up SpaceEye-T
with another high-resolution satellite launched in 2027 and two more in
2028. (5/20)
Iceye Seeks Role in Golden Dome
(Source: Space News)
Radar imaging company Iceye is looking to play a role in the Golden
Dome missile-defense system. The company says that its synthetic
aperture radar imaging satellites could support infrared sensors used
to detect missile launches, such as tracking activities leading up to
those launches. Iceye is in early conversations with potential partners
in the defense industry regarding Golden Dome opportunities. (5/20)
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