July 2, 2025

Axiom-4 Boost for India’s Human Spaceflight Plans (Source: Hindustan Times)
The recent Axiom-4 mission, featuring group captain Shubhanshu Shukla of the Indian Air Force as pilot, is far more than a symbolic gesture for India. It represents an important and strategic stepping stone for the Indian Space Research Organization (Isro)’s ambitious Gaganyaan manned spaceflight program. It is also a firm indication that India is now ready to move onto a more mature space program. (7/1)

Polish Astronaut Conducts Groundbreaking Mental Health and Brain-Tech Experiments (Source: TVP World)
Polish astronaut Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski has begun his first scientific experiments aboard the International Space Station, with potential applications reaching far beyond orbit. The research includes studies on astronaut mental health, brain-computer interaction, and stress under microgravity—trials that may advance both space travel and psychological health on Earth. He is also expected to engage with Polish students in live lessons from space in the coming days. (7/1)

Canadian Astronauts Train to Explore the Moon’s Surface (Source: SpaceQ)
Canada is home to about 30 impact craters, where certain rock formations resemble those on the Moon. In the 1970s, Apollo astronauts took geology training at the Sudbury Basin in Ontario. Over 50 years later, Dr. Gordon Osinski from Western University is leading astronauts on expeditions in various craters in Canada to prepare them for future lunar missions. (7/1)

Congress Just Greenlit a NASA Moon Plan Opposed by Musk and Isaacman (Source: Tech Crunch)
Legacy aerospace giants scored a win Tuesday when the U.S. Senate passed President Trump’s budget reconciliation bill that earmarks billions more for NASA’s flagship Artemis program. The $10 billion addition to the Artemis architecture, which includes funding for additional SLS rockets and Gateway, is a rebuke to critics who wished to see alternative technologies used instead.

Among those critics are SpaceX CEO Elon Musk and billionaire entrepreneur Jared Isaacman, who Musk proposed as the next NASA administrator. There’s no sign the souring relations between Musk and Trump are recovering. If Trump signs the bill, the fallout, which began after the president’s abrupt revocation of Isaacman’s nomination, will likely continue — if not escalate. (7/1)

Trump Escalates Feud with Musk, Threatens Tesla, SpaceX Support (Source: Reuters)
President Trump on Tuesday threatened to cut off the billions of dollars in subsidies that Elon Musk's companies receive from the federal government, in an escalation of the war of words between the president and the world's richest man, one-time allies who have since fallen out. The feud reignited on Monday when Musk, who spent hundreds of millions on Trump's re-election, renewed his criticism of Trump's tax-cut and spending bill, which would eliminate subsidies for electric vehicle purchases that have benefited Tesla, the leading U.S. EV maker. That bill passed the Senate by a narrow margin midday Tuesday. (7/1)

Slashed NASA Funding Would Impact Colorado Programs, Jobs (Source: Denver 7)
The Planetary Society reports that the budget for NASA would fall to its lowest level since 1961, if the cuts become reality. It would also be the "largest percentage cut ever proposed for NASA," according to the organization. Coloradans who have dedicated their lives to space exploration are concerned about the impact the cuts to NASA could have on the state and country.

"American leadership in space isn't just about being number one. It's about jobs. All of the aerospace industry provides jobs here in the state of Colorado, as well as the entire nation," Curry said. "In the state of Colorado, there's $5 billion in economic output just in the aerospace industry." (7/2)

MethaneSAT Fails in Orbit (Source: Space News)
A privately funded methane-monitoring satellite has failed in orbit. The Environmental Defense Fund said Tuesday it lost contact with its MethaneSAT spacecraft on June 20, and concluded the satellite has lost power and cannot be revived. MethaneSAT launched in March 2024 to track emissions of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas. The spacecraft was privately developed, with funding primarily coming from the Bezos Earth Fund. MethaneSAT used a bus from Blue Canyon Technologies and instruments developed by BAE Systems. The MethaneSAT project said it would continue to analyze data collected by the spacecraft, originally intended to operate for five years, but did not commit to building a replacement. (7/2)

Planet  Labs Wins $280 Million German Contract for Satellite Imagery and Geospatial Intel (Source: Space News)
Planet Labs announced Tuesday a major contract to supply satellite imagery and geospatial intelligence to the German government. The multiyear contract valued at $280 million is the latest sign of surging international demand for commercial space-based surveillance capabilities. Planet executives noted that European governments, pressed to spend more on defense, are investing in geospatial intelligence capabilities, opening up new opportunities for the company. That increased European business comes as Planet faces potential cuts to spending on commercial imagery by the U.S. government. (7/2)

Big Bill Includes Billions for Golden Dome and Artemis (Source: Washington Post)
The Senate passed a budget reconciliation bill that includes billions for Golden Dome and Artemis. Vice President JD Vance cast a tiebreaking vote to secure the passage of the Senate’s version of HR 1, the budget reconciliation bill, sending it back to the House for a final vote. The bill includes $25 billion for the Golden Dome missile defense program, part of $150 billion in additional defense spending. The Senate added nearly $10 billion for NASA exploration programs, including buying additional SLS and Orion vehicles and completing the Gateway. The Senate bill also has $85 million to direct the transfer of a “space vehicle” to a NASA center, a provision intended to move the shuttle Discovery from the National Air and Space Museum to Houston. (7/2)

NASA Officials Told to Prepare Termination Plans for Their Programs (Source: Ars Technica)
NASA officials are telling missions to prepare termination plans even before Congress acts on its budget proposal. Missions that the administration fiscal year 2026 budget request proposes to cancel have been told to prepare closeout plans as soon as next week. Those plans could be implemented when the fiscal year begins Oct. 1. Congress is unlikely to have completed appropriations bills by then and will pass a continuing resolution to fund programs at 2025 levels, but there is concern the White House will unilaterally act to implement its budget proposal and shut down missions. (7/2)

Russian Cargo Craft Departs ISS, Making Way for Another Launching This Week (Source: TASS)
A Progress cargo spacecraft undocked from the International Space Station Tuesday. The Progress MS-29 spacecraft undocked from the station at 2:43 p.m. Eastern and deorbited several hours later. The undocking frees up a port on the ISS for a new Progress spacecraft, Progress MS-31, scheduled to launch to the station on Thursday. (7/2)

NASA Astronaut Menon Gets First Assignment to ISS (Source: NASA)
NASA assigned an astronaut to a space station mission next year. The agency said Tuesday that Anil Menon will go to the ISS next June on a Soyuz spacecraft with Russian cosmonauts Pyotr Dubrov and Anna Kikina for an eight-month stay. Menon, a doctor who was SpaceX’s first flight surgeon, was selected as a NASA astronaut in 2021 and will be making his first spaceflight. His wife, Anna Menon, flew to space last year on a SpaceX Crew Dragon as part of the Polaris Dawn private astronaut mission. (7/2)

Future Space Station Life Support Systems (Source: Aerospace America)
Designing and building life support systems for space stations requires a delicate balance of knowledge, safety and cost. As a handful of companies proceed with plans to develop their own stations to succeed the International Space Station, Jonathan O’Callaghan explores how they’re approaching the challenge. Click here. (7/1)

SpaceX Launches Starlink Satellites, Hours After Other Mission in Florida (Source: Spaceflight Now)
Hours later, another Falcon 9 launched more Starlink satellites. The Falcon 9 launched from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station at 2:28 a.m. Eastern Thursday, putting 27 Starlink satellites into orbit. The launch was the 29th flight of this booster, a new record for SpaceX, and also marked the 500th launch of a Falcon 9 rocket since the vehicle’s debut 15 years ago. (7/2)

Draft Documents Reveal Proposed SpaceX Launch Site at Vandenberg Base (Source: Edhat)
The Air Force has unveiled a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) outlining the new plans for SpaceX within the Vandenberg campus. The project has been proposed as part of the company’s efforts to expand at VSFB. The proposal is still under review, and public comment is highly encouraged. The draft examines potential impacts on noise levels, cultural resources, biological resources, and air quality. Public comments have been encouraged until July 7, 2025.

If approved, the plan for SLC-6 will entail both demolition and construction of new structures. Legacy structures such as those associated with the shuttle and Delta IV programs will be eliminated, including the Mobile Service Tower and Launch Control Center. (7/1)

Ladovaz Becomes SpinLaunch CEO (Source: SpinLaunch)
A former chief technology officer of OneWeb is the new CEO of SpinLaunch. The company announced Tuesday it hired Massimiliano Ladovaz as its CEO, succeeding David Wrenn, who will remain at the company as chief innovation officer. Ladovaz was CTO of OneWeb as it developed and deployed its initial satellite constellation, and earlier this year was named interim CTO of SatOne, an Australian satellite connectivity company. SpinLaunch is best known for its plans to develop kinetic launch systems using a giant centrifuge, but the company announced plans earlier this year for its own satellite constellation, Meridian Space. (7/2)

Launch of Australia's 1st Orbital Rocket, Gilmour Space's Eris-1, Delayed Again (Source: Space.com)
Gilmour Space has stood down from the planned July 2 debut launch of its Eris-1 rocket, citing the desire for "a longer, more flexible launch window for our first test flight." A new target date could be announced next week, according to the company. The Australian company's first rocket was ready to fly in May, but an early trigger of the vehicle's fairing  nixed that try. (7/1)

Starlink’s Wi-Fi Is Faster In the Air Than On the Ground (Source: CNET)
Starlink is nearly twice as fast as any other in-flight Wi-Fi option, according to a new report by the speed test site Ookla. Starlink’s speeds in the air are faster than some internet providers on the ground. The satellite internet company from SpaceX clocked median download speeds of 152Mbps and upload speeds of 24Mbps.

Those download and upload speeds were nearly twice as fast as any other in-flight internet option, but latency was where it really blew the competition away. Starlink’s in-flight latency came in at just 44ms; the next-closest, MTN Satellite Communications, was at 667ms. With those kinds of numbers, you could realistically game online or make a video call on a Starlink-equipped flight. (7/1)

SpaceX Deorbits Nearly 500 Starlink Satellites in 6 Months (Source: PC Magazine)
Over a six-month stretch, hundreds of Starlink satellites met a fiery end in the Earth’s atmosphere as SpaceX retired its aging hardware. From December to May, SpaceX deorbited 472 Starlink satellites, according to a new filing with the Federal Communications Commission. The means the company deorbited about 2.6 satellites per day, a notable increase after having only deorbited 73 satellites in the previous six-month period.

SpaceX's satellites are designed to orbit the Earth for five years before they’re retired and burn up in the Earth’s atmosphere. In the FCC filing, SpaceX said 430 of the deorbited satellites belonged to the first-generation Starlink network. However, most of the satellites that reentered the atmosphere did so less than five years after beginning operations. (7/1)

Starlink Now in Sri Lanka (Source: Daily Mirror)
Elon Musk has announced that Starlink, his satellite-based internet service, is now available in Sri Lanka. Taking to social media platform ‘X’, Musk posted, “Starlink now available in Sri Lanka!” Starlink received regulatory clearance in August 2024 after the Sri Lankan government amended its telecommunications laws to accommodate satellite-based internet providers. (7/2)

Project Kuiper Supports Global Broadband Access (Source: Broadband Breakfast)
The National Science Foundation and Amazon have signed a satellite coordination agreement aimed at expanding global broadband access and advancing astronomical science. The agreement sets protocols for Project Kuiper, Amazon's low-Earth orbit satellite network, to minimize interference with ground-based astronomy by following best practices from the International Astronomical Union. (7/1)

Astroscale Opens New Headquarters and R&D Lab in Toulouse (Source: Evertiq)
Astroscale France, a subsidiary of Astroscale Holdings, has officially opened its new headquarters and advanced R&D lab in Toulouse, France, strengthening its commitment to domestic innovation and Europe’s sovereignty in space. The new site will enable the company to scale its R&D, grow its supply chain, and deepen collaboration with Centre Nationa0l D’Etudes Spatiales (CNES), the French Space Command, the European Space Agency and European defense stakeholders. (7/1

SwRI, UTSA Selected by NASA to Test Electrolyzer Technology Aboard Parabolic Flights (Source: SwRI)
Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) and The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) will receive a $500,000 award from NASA’s TechLeap Prize program to flight test novel electrolyzer technology designed to improve the production of propellants and life-support compounds on the Moon, Mars or near-Earth asteroids. The project, known as the Mars Atmospheric Reactor for Synthesis of Consumables (MARS-C), is designed to use local resources on the Moon or Mars to produce fuel, oxygen and other life support compounds needed for long-term human habitation. (7/1)

Pentagon May Put SpaceX at the Center of a Sensor-to-Shooter Targeting Network (Source: Ars Technica)
The Trump administration plans to cancel a fleet of orbiting data relay satellites managed by the Space Development Agency and replace it with a secretive network that, so far, relies primarily on SpaceX's Starlink Internet constellation, according to budget documents.

The move prompted questions from lawmakers during a Senate hearing on the Space Force's budget last week. While details of the Pentagon's plan remain secret, the White House proposal would commit $277 million in funding to kick off a new program called "pLEO SATCOM" or "MILNET." (7/1)

Space Force Boosting an Ecosystem of GPS Alternatives in Low-Earth Orbit (Source: Air and Space Forces)
The Space Force is playing midwife to a new ecosystem of commercial satellite constellations providing alternatives to the service’s own Global Positioning Service from much closer to the Earth, making their signals more accurate and harder to jam. 

A half-dozen companies, including two with research contracts from Space Force or Air Force tech incubators, are currently planning low-Earth orbit (LEO) constellations of hundreds of small satellites that will offer position, navigation, and timing services to augment or back up GPS. (7/1)

Rocket Lab Logs Major Milestones for SDA Constellation (Source: Rocket Lab)
Rocket Lab announced the successful completion of its Critical Design Review (CDR) for the Space Development Agency’s (SDA) Tranche 2 Transport Layer-Beta (T2TL-Beta) program. The milestone follows Rocket Lab’s successful Preliminary Design Review in late 2024, confirms that spacecraft design, manufacturing approach, and systems architecture meet all mission requirements and enables the program to move into full-scale production. (7/1)

LeoLabs Wins SpaceWERX Contract for Mobile Missile Tracking Radar (Source: S[ace News)
LeoLabs won $4 million to upgrade a mobile missile-tracking radar system. The funding was awarded through a Tactical Funding Increase (TACFI) agreement, a cost-sharing mechanism used by the U.S. Department of the Air Force’s SpaceWERX program to accelerate the deployment of dual-use commercial technologies with national security applications. The funding, split evenly between the Air Force Research Lab and private sources, will go toward software upgrades of Scout, a mobile radar used to enhance detection and tracking of missile launches. (7/2)

DOD To Tap Second Vendor For MEO-Based Missile Tracking Sats (Source: Aviation Week)
The U.S. Space Force expects to soon award a second contract for its next batch of missile warning/missile tracking satellites in medium Earth orbit (MEO), the program executive officer for space sensing said July 1. The service on May 29 awarded a $1.2 billion contract to BAE. (7/1)

Space Force Brigadier General Atwood Dies (Source: The Gazette)
Members of Space Operations Command are mourning the loss of a highly respected senior officer. The command’s Deputy Commander, Brig. Gen. Chandler Atwood, died Sunday, officials said. No cause of death was given. (7/1)

SDA's Dragoon Satellite Showcases Rapid Operational Shift (Source: Defense One)
The Space Development Agency has achieved a milestone with the Dragoon satellite, the first of 12 planned as part of the Tranche 1 Demonstration and Experimentation System. Dragoon shifted from safe mode to operational mode in four days instead of four months, and the acquisition process for Tranche 0 has been reduced to as little as 27 months from as many as eight years. "This is why I'm such a believer in this spiral development model: you launch, you learn while you're building the next ones," SDA Director Derek Tournear says. "That's what we keep pushing." (7/1)

Curious 2024 Radio Burst Linked to Dead Satellite (Source: CNN)
The signal seemed to be coming from very close to Earth — so close that it couldn’t be an astronomical object. “We were able to work out it came from about 4,500 kilometers away. And we got a pretty exact match for this old satellite called Relay 2." NASA launched Relay 2, an experimental communications satellite, into orbit in 1964 to relay signals between the US and Europe and broadcast the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Just three years later, with its mission concluded and both of its main instruments out of order, Relay 2 had already turned into space junk.

It has since been aimlessly orbiting our planet, until researchers linked it to the weird signal they detected last year. The researchers have two ideas on what could have caused such a powerful spark. The main culprit was likely a buildup of static electricity on the satellite’s metal skin, which was suddenly released, James said. “You start with a buildup of electrons on the surface of the spacecraft. The spacecraft starts charging up because of the buildup of electrons. And it keeps charging up until there’s enough of a charge that it short-circuits some component of the spacecraft, and you get a sudden spark.”

A less likely cause is the impact of a micrometeorite, a space rock no bigger than 1 millimeter in size: “A micrometeorite impacting a spacecraft (while) traveling at 20 kilometers per second or higher will basically turn the (resulting) debris from the impact into a plasma — an incredibly hot, dense gas,” James said. “And this plasma can emit a short burst of radio waves." (6/30)

JWST Readies for Deeper Study of Water Planet (Source: Union Rayo)
Only 100 light-years from Earth, there is a planet that is causing a lot of buzz. Astronomers have identified it as TOI-1452 b, and it could be covered by 30% water. We would be talking about the first ocean planet documented by science. TOI-1452 b challenges everything we thought we knew about exoplanets. Given its orbit, it seemed unlikely to feature liquid water. The key is in the combination of its low density, the heat it receives from its star, and its size.

The first analyses indicate that it could be made of layers of liquid water or ice, similar to the hidden oceans of the moons Ganymede and Enceladus. And its location in the constellation Draco makes it a perfect target for the James Webb Space Telescope, which is already preparing to analyze its atmosphere in search of signs of life (or at least habitable conditions). (6/30)

Space Force Seeks Industry Ideas For Space-Based Interceptors (Source: Aviation Week)
The U.S. Space Force (USSF) is conducting market research regarding space-based interceptor (SBI) capabilities for missile defense purposes, a June 27 request for information (RFI) says. (6/30)

Move Over Starlink, Here Comes Kuiper (Source: Gulf News)
Project Kuiper aims to beam high-speed, low-latency internet to every nook and cranny of the planet — especially remote and underserved areas where reliable connectivity is still a dream. With over 80 launches booked on rockets from ULA, Blue Origin, Arianespace, and even SpaceX (yes, Amazon is hitching a ride on Musk’s Falcon 9!), Kuiper is gearing up for a serious space race.

Each Kuiper satellite features optical inter-satellite links (OISLs) — high-speed infrared laser connections that allow them to talk directly to each other in space. These links can transfer data at up to 100 Gbps over distances of 2,600 km, enabling rapid, low-latency data routing without always needing to bounce signals to Earth.

Since testing prototypes in 2023, Amazon has significantly upgraded the production satellites. The latest designs include enhanced phased array antennas, custom processors, improved solar arrays, and better optical and propulsion systems to support faster, more reliable connections, according to the company. (7/1)

Don’t Forget About Iran’s Space Program (Source: Politico)
Left out of Israel and the United States’ bombardment of Iran was one potentially key piece of infrastructure: Iran’s growing space program, which U.S. officials have warned could one day help power an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of striking far beyond the Middle East. The program may have suffered indirectly in the strikes though — and could well be a target in the future.

Iran currently has no known program for building ICBMs. Indeed, Iran has taken pains to say it has limited its missiles’ range to under 1250 miles. However, Iran does have an increasingly robust space program — which could allow it to develop the rocketry and associated tech necessary to build an ICBM. (6/30)

Hey Siri, Fix My Spacecraft! (Source: Texas A&M)
When astronauts make the long journey to Mars in the not-so-distant future, communication with mission control will be impossible for days to weeks at a time. Enter Daphne-AT, a virtual assistant (VA) designed to help astronauts safely and efficiently solve problems that arise on their spacecraft. While Daphne-AT might not be ready to help our astronauts on the way to Mars just yet, researchers from Texas A&M are working toward giving Daphne the ability to help solve spacecraft anomalies. (6/30)

Mitsubishi and JAXA Aim to Halve Launch Cost of H3 Rocket (Source: Japan Times)
Japan's H2 rocket failed to win commercial launch orders, a problem that has been passed on to its successor, the H3. There was an average of only two H2 launches a year, and most depended on “public demand” for government satellites. There were only orders for commercial launches for five satellites belonging to foreign countries. The launch fee was expensive, reaching as high as ¥10 billion.

For Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which took over the manufacture and operation of the H2A from JAXA in 2007, winning commercial orders has been a longstanding issue. “If we cannot win the competition in the market, we will not be able to maintain the [domestic] industry, and there will be no companies or personnel to manufacture rockets. Our current technology will one day become obsolete, so it is essential to develop a rocket to succeed the H3,” said Hiroaki Akiyama. (7/1)

The Second Launch of New Glenn Will Aim for Mars (Source: Ars Technica)
Blue Origin is making steady progress toward the second launch of its New Glenn rocket, which could occur sometime this fall. The company already ignited the second stage of this rocket, in a pre-launch test, in April. And two sources say the first stage for this launch is in the final stages of preparation at the company's facilities at the Cape Canaveral Spaceport.

Publicly, the company has said this second launch will take place no earlier than August 15. This is now off the table. One source told Ars that a mid- to late-September launch date was "realistic," but another person said late October or November was more likely. Sources say it will carry NASA's ESCAPADE mission, with a pair of small spacecraft that will be sent to Mars to study the red planet's magnetosphere. (6/30)

White House Works to Ground NASA Science Missions Before Congress Can Act (Source: Ars Technica)
In another sign that the Trump White House is aggressively moving to slash NASA’s science programs, dozens of mission leaders have been asked to prepare "closeout" plans by the end of next week.

The new directive came from NASA's senior leadership on Monday, which is acting on behalf of the White House Office of Management and Budget. Copies of these memos, which appear to vary a little by department, were reviewed by Ars. The detailed closeout plans called for must be prepared by as soon as July 9 for some missions, which has left principal investigators scrambling due to the tight deadline and the July 4 holiday weekend. (7/1)

China to Set Up First International Association on Deep-Space Exploration (Source: Xinhua)
China will officially launch the International Deep Space Exploration Association (IDSEA) next Monday, with a particular aim of empowering other developing countries in developing deep-space technologies. Located in Hefei, Anhui Province, the association will be the nation's first international academic organization in the aerospace domain, capitalizing on the growing global interest in China's lunar and Mars missions.

The IDSEA will focus on deep-space study, which includes probes into the moon, other planets and asteroids, and promote international cooperation, according to the Hefei-based Deep Space Exploration Laboratory, one of the association's five initiators. (7/1)

Air Force and Space Force Exceed Annual Recruiting Goals (Source: USSF)
The Department of the Air Force achieved 100% of its annual recruitment goal three months ahead of schedule, a testament to the enduring appeal of service and the effectiveness of modernized recruiting strategies. To date, the Air Force and Space Force have sent nearly 25,000 of the 30,000 contracted recruits to basic military training, while the remaining recruits are scheduled to begin training by Sep. 30. (6/30)

NASA Budget Cuts Threaten Europe's Already Troubled Flagship Mars Rover (Source: Space.com)
Cuts to NASA's budget proposed by President Donald Trump would likely cause further delays to Europe's ExoMars rover mission, due to the fact that some critical technologies currently unavailable in Europe were to be provided by the American space agency.

When Europe began planning for its first rover to land on Mars in the early 2000s, NASA was its partner of choice. Somehow, that alliance proved troubled. NASA withdrew from the ExoMars project in 2012 after the Obama administration eliminated its funding for the mission. Russia's space agency Roscosmos stepped in, committing to provide a rocket, a landing module and a few other bits and pieces.

After several delays and budget overruns, the project was finally on schedule to launch in September 2022. But Russia's invasion of Ukraine meant that cooperation had to end. NASA stepped back in 2024, offering to help ESA make it to the launch pad by 2028. The Trump budget cuts now mean Europe may have to go it alone, possibly facing further delays. (6/30)

Moog Expands in New York (Source: Space News)
Moog Inc. has completed its new electromechanical actuation facility to enhance its manufacturing capabilities for space and defense customers that need precision steering in the most demanding domains. This customer-focused expansion at Moog headquarters in East Aurora addresses the growing need for innovative precision actuation and avionics systems to control and steer launchers.

Once complete, the 120,000-square-foot facility will be the largest Moog site dedicated to its diverse space portfolio, which includes components and systems for launchers, missiles, satellites, and human habitats. Moog technology launches into space weekly and has enabled missions to every planet in our solar system. (6/30)

Astronaut Sells Flown Checklist Pages He Wasn't Meant to Have (Source: CollectSpace)
Former NASA astronaut Robert "Hoot" Gibson is selling pages from the checklists he used on his first space shuttle mission. There are two things remarkable about that. First, in the more than 40 years since he launched as the pilot of mission STS-41B, Gibson has never sold anything that he carried to or used in space, even on his later four flights as commander. Secondly, he was never supposed to have his flown checklists. (6/28)

SpaceX Launches ESA Payloads From Florida (Sources: Spaceflight Now, Bill Harwood)
A Falcon 9 rocket launched the Meteosat Third Generation Sounder (MTG-S1) satellite on behalf of the European Organization for the Exploration of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT). The satellite included the Copernicus Sentinel-4 instrument, provided by the European Commission. The mission is coordinated and managed by ESA. 
This was the 82nd Falcon 9 launch so far this year and the 499th since the rocket's debut in 2010. (7/1)

There Are Too Many Spacecraft in LEO (Source: Payload)
Objects in orbit stay there for a long time, and we keep putting more up there. Now, researchers say that despite efforts by satellite operators to limit collisions, popular orbits are too crowded for long-term stability. The number of objects in orbit between 800 km and 1,000 km are above the Kessler Syndrome 'runaway' threshold, and objects in the region between 600 km and 1,000 km is above the 'unstable' threshold. Without a response, the technology required to avoid collisions in those orbits could make them too expensive for satellite operators to use. (7/1)

FAA: June Was a Record Month for Commercial Space (Source: FAA)
FAA-licensed commercial space operations reached a new monthly record in June, with 21 operations. The previous record for a single month was 20, in November 2024. The FAA continues to fine-tune its internal processes and policies to reach timely license authorizations that support the increasing pace of operations now and into the future. (7/1)

Sidereus Space Dynamics Nears Completion of EOS Test Stand (Source: European Spaceflight)
Italian rocket builder Sidereus Space Dynamics has announced that it is nearing completion of its Solaris Test Bench, which will be used for key testing of its EOS launch system before its inaugural flight. Sidereus Space Dynamics describes its EOS launch system as a small single-stage-to-orbit rocket designed to be transported, along with all its launch infrastructure, in a 40-foot container. (7/1)

Boeing Names Stephen Parker as CEO of Defense, Space & Security (Source: Boeing)
Boeing announced Stephen Parker as president and CEO of its Defense, Space & Security (BDS) business. Parker has served as interim leader of the Boeing business unit since September 2024. Parker will report to Boeing President Kelly Ortberg and serve on the company's Executive Council. Parker will oversee all aspects of the company's business unit that provides technology, products and solutions for defense, government, space and intelligence customers worldwide. (7/1)

MethaneSAT Malfunctions, Contact Lost (Source: MethaneSAT)
On June 20, the MethaneSAT mission operations lost contact with MethaneSAT. After pursuing all options to restore communications, we learned this morning that the satellite has lost power, and that it is likely not recoverable. While this is difficult news, it is not the end of the overall MethaneSAT effort, or of our work to slash methane emissions. 

Launched in March 2024, MethaneSAT had been collecting methane emissions data over the past year. It was one of the most advanced methane tracking satellites in space, measuring methane emissions in oil and gas producing regions across the world. The mission has been a remarkable success in terms of scientific and technological accomplishment, and for its lasting influence on both industry and regulators worldwide. (7/1)

Endangered Turtles Share Mexican Beach with Starship Debris. SpaceX Says There’s No Risk of Harm (Source: CNN)
Melted plastics, aluminum and pieces of blue adhesive. It all ends up on the sands of Bagdad beach in Tamaulipas, Mexico, home to an endangered species of sea turtle. Conibio Global, a small non-governmental organization, has taken on a daunting task: cleaning up trash from SpaceX. Jesús Elías Ibarra of Conibio Global claims millions of particles ended up contaminating the area on the Mexican side. The organization collected more than a ton of waste in an area of 500 meters.

“We are a very small group, it’s impossible to clean everything.” SpaceX claimed they have requested local and federal assistance from the Mexican government for debris recovery. Under the Outer Space Treaty, SpaceX is entitled to have its debris returned. “The debris is still there,” Ibarra said. “It’s no longer as visible as in the photos because the tides have been burying it, but it’s there, and it has to be removed sooner or later.”

Ibarra claimed that during one of the cleanup visits they were “harassed” by SpaceX drones that were recording them. Ibarra, who is also a veterinarian and director of the Marine Turtle Program at Conibio Global, said that he believes the vibrations generated by the rockets compact the sand where there are turtle nests and prevent them from emerging. He said that at least 300 hatchlings have died in the compacted nests. (7/1)

July 1, 2025

Is the US Forfeiting its Red Planet Leadership to China's Mars Sample Return Plan? (Source: Space.com)
While NASA's Mars Sample Return initiative is in political hot water, China is moving ahead on plotting out its rendezvous with the Red Planet. New details of China's aims are emerging. China's intent is to haul back to Earth a Mars treasure trove or rock and soil via its Tianwen-3 mission. The plan calls for launch of two boosters in 2028 in support of their Mars Sample Return (MSR), which could send at least a pound (500 grams) of the extraterrestrial goodies back to Earth around 2031.

A drill mounted on China's MSR lander would penetrate to a depth of 6.5 feet (2 meters) to collect several grams of subsurface samples, while a robotic arm will gather more than 400 grams of the foreign surface material from the landing site. Apparently, also on the agenda is use of a robotic helicopter. This drone, outfitted with an arm, is to be deployed for rock sampling at locations greater than 300 feet (over 100 meters) from the lander. (6/29)

UK’s Orbex and Germany’s Exolaunch Sign Strategic Partnership Agreement In Launch Services (Source: Orbex)
Orbex, the UK-based orbital launch services company, announced a strategic five-year partnership with Exolaunch, a global leader in launch services, mission management, deployment systems and integration services for small satellites. The agreement will see Orbex and Exolaunch collaborate to provide end-to-end launch services for small satellites. (7/1)

Northrop Grumman Shows SpaceX Doesn't Have a Monopoly on Explosions (Source: The Register)
Old Space has shown itself to be just as adept at explosive malfunctions as New Space, with Northrop Grumman encountering an anomaly during a static fire test of an updated solid rocket booster design. The test was the first demonstration test fire of NASA's Booster Obsolescence and Life Extension (BOLE) solid rocket booster, a five-segment booster intended for NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) once the US space agency exhausts its remaining inventory of parts from the Space Shuttle era.

The booster was secured to the ground at the Utah test site and fired for slightly more than two minutes. All went well for the first 100 seconds or so, until it appeared that the rocket's nozzle had failed. (6/30)

Human Remains Lost After Memorial Spaceflight Capsule Crashes Into the Sea (Source: Space.com)
A space capsule included on a recent SpaceX launch almost survived its decent back to Earth, so The Exploration Company is deeming their mission a "partial success".

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched the Transporter-14 rideshare mission June 23, sending 70 payloads from different customers into orbit. The satellites included cubesats and other spacecraft bound for low-Earth orbit, as well as two reentry capsule designed for recovery back on Earth.

The first came from Varda Space — the company's fourth "Winnebago" series spacecraft designed to test first-of-its-kind on-orbit pharmaceutical manufacturing. Its mission is still underway. The second, Tranporter-14's largest payload and the last to be released, was European spacecraft manufacturer The Exploration Company's "Mission Possible" Nyx capsule, carrying remains contributed by loved ones through Celestis Memorial Spaceflights. (6/26)

Sidus Space Partners with VORAGO Technologies to Advance Radiation-Hardened Tech (Source: Sidus Space)
Sidus Space announced a strategic collaboration with VORAGO Technologies to validate and integrate next-generation radiation-hardened microcontroller (MCU) technology through VORAGO’s Alpha Customer Program. Sidus Space has previously utilized VORAGO MCUs, but will now play a pivotal role in the early validation and system-level integration of VORAGO’s future high-performance radiation-hardened microcontroller. (6/30)

Skynopy Raises €15 Million to Build the First Real-Time, High-Speed, Satellite Ground Station Network (Source: Skynopy)
France's Skynopy completed a record fundraising round less than 18 months after its creation. With this new €15 million, Skynopy will work to deploy a global network of high-throughput ground stations (S, X and Ka bands), enabling real-time satellite data downlink services—particularly for Earth observation constellations. (6/30)

NOAA Budget Would Cancel Space Traffic Coordination Effort (Source: Space News)
NOAA’s fiscal year 2026 budget proposal would cancel the space traffic coordination system it is developing. The detailed NOAA budget proposal, released Monday, confirms speculation that NOAA would seek to end funding for the Traffic Coordination System for Space, or TraCSS. That program would take space situational awareness data from government and commercial sources to provide conjunction warnings and related services.

The Office of Space Commerce, within NOAA, has been developing TraCSS and is beta testing it with some satellite operators. NOAA argued in the budget that private entities could provide such services. A former head of the office, though, said that argument is a “fundamental misunderstanding” of the value of TraCSS to promote real-time data sharing and be an authoritative benchmark among other systems. Some industry groups have also called on NOAA to continue TraCSS. (7/1)

Space Force Satellites Set for Proximity Maneuvering (Source: Space News)
The U.S. Space Force is working to develop a new generation of military satellites designed to maneuver unpredictably through space. Kelly Hammett, director of the Space Rapid Capabilities Office (Space RCO), an organization within the Space Force, outlined at a recent event a roadmap for what the military calls “dynamic space operations,” a catchall for orbital maneuvers considered too fuel-intensive or technically impractical for traditional satellites.

The office plans to develop geostationary satellites that would serve as testbeds for the dynamic operations concept. They would demonstrate not only maneuverability but the software and ground systems needed to make such operations routine.  Hammett did not provide an estimated timeline for the launch of these maneuverable spacecraft, which would be the office’s first “full-up” satellites. (7/1)

Chines Satellites in GEO Perform Proximity Maneuvering (Source: Space News)
Two Chinese spacecraft in GEO are conducting proximity operations for a second time. The Shijian-21 and Shijian-25 spacecraft appeared to come together June 30, according to optical ground tracking from Swiss company S2a systems. The two spacecraft came within a kilometer of each other on June 13 and may have docked. The spacecraft appear to be testing rendezvous and proximity operations technologies for an on-orbit refueling demonstration. (7/1)

Singapore's Liberatech Space Developing Analysis Tools for Mining (Source: Space News)
Singapore startup Liberatech Space is developing Earth observation analysis tools for the mining industry. The company, founded last year, is working to use satellite data to address challenges in the commodity, energy and environmental industries. It announced a partnership in June with Kongsberg Satellite Services of Norway to combine its extensive Earth observation and communications infrastructure with Liberatech’s artificial intelligence-enhanced analytics. (7/1)

Europe Space Law to Harmonize Regulations (Source: Space News)
The release of a draft European Union space law marks the start of discussions about space regulations in Europe. The European Commission released last week the long-awaited draft of the EU Space Act, which sets rules on topics such as space sustainability and cybersecurity of space systems. The act is designed to harmonize regulations across the EU, where 12 of 27 member states have national space laws.

However, specific details, like post-mission disposal timelines for satellites, are not included in the law itself but will be established later by a separate implementing act. Passing the EU Space Act by the European Council and European Parliament could take as long as two years, and the law would only apply to satellites launched starting in 2030. (7/1)

NASA Continues Efforts to Contact Lunar Trailblazer (Source: NASA)
NASA is trying a little longer to reestablish contact with a lunar smallsat. Contact with the Lunar Trailblazer spacecraft was lost shortly after its launch in February. NASA previously said it would try through mid-June to restore communications, but said Monday it will continue those efforts through early July, based on favorable lighting conditions. NASA hopes that enough sunlight can reach the spacecraft’s solar panels to power up its radio, but will consider closing out the mission if it does not hear from the spacecraft. NASA says that if contact can be restored with Trailblazer, it may still be possible to put it into a lunar orbit and carry out its mission to map lunar water ice. (7/1)

Italy Advances Lunar Mission (Source: European Spaceflight)
The Italian space agency ASI is funding the next phase of a lunar mission. ASI said last week it signed a contract with OHB Italia for the next phase of the Oxygen Retrieval Asset by Carbothermal-reduction in Lunar Environment (ORACLE) mission. ORACLE would fly a payload to the surface of the moon to test the ability to extract oxygen from lunar regolith. The new phase of the mission will allow work on ORACLE to proceed to the flight model stage. (7/1)

DoD Delays Cutoff of Weather Satellite Data to NOAA (Source: New York Times)
The Defense Department will continue to provide weather satellite data to forecasters, but only for a month. NOAA said Monday that microwave sounder data the DoD had provided from its weather satellites, which was due to be cut off at the end of June, would continue through July. NOAA said the original decision to stop providing the data was due to a “significant cybersecurity risk” but didn’t elaborate. Meteorologists had warned that the loss of the DoD weather satellite data could degrade the accuracy of forecasts of tropical weather systems. (7/1)

NASA Earth Imagery Coming to Netflix (Source: Hollywood Reporter)
NASA programming will soon be available on Netflix. The streaming service said Monday it will add NASA+ to its lineup later this summer, allowing subscribers access to live coverage of launches and related events. NASA unveiled NASA+ as a free streaming service last year, replacing NASA TV, and Netflix said adding NASA+ is part of its effort to add more live programming. (7/1)

Space is Hard. There is No Excuse for Pretending it’s Easy (Source: Space News)
The headlines in the space industry over the past month have delivered a sobering reminder: space is not forgiving, and certainly not friendly to overpromising entrepreneurs.

From iSpace’s second failed lunar landing attempt (making them 0 for 2) to SpaceX’s ongoing Starship test flight setbacks — amid a backdrop of exploding prototypes and shifting goalposts — the evidence is mounting that the commercialization of space is not progressing in the triumphant arc that press releases might suggest. This isn’t just a series of flukes. It points to a structural, strategic and cultural problem in how we talk about innovation, cost and success in space today. (6/30)

As SpaceX Landing Zone Lease Expires, Companies Negotiate Deal for Falcon-9 Landings (Source: Spectrum 13)
Last week’s Axiom 4 launch featured the return of SpaceX’s first stage Falcon 9 booster back at Landing Zone 1 (LZ-1) at the Cape Canaveral Spaceport. This return is significant because the SpaceX lease on LZ-1 is coming to an end in July 2025. And it means that SpaceX’s famed Falcon 9 first-stage booster may be returning on a launch pad instead of LZ-1 during crewed missions.

Back in May 2023, Space Launch Delta 45 issued a press release, stating, “SLC 13, currently Landing Zone 1 and 2, is also moving forward with Phantom Space and Vaya Space.” It means that the existing launch complex property agreements for landing operations will be discontinued once the agreements expire.

“Vaya and Phantom are committed to making the best possible use of limited launch real estate on the Space Coast," said Vaya's Robert Fabian. "We’ve agreed among the three of us to extend SpaceX's use of SLC-13 through the end of the year while we are doing off-site preparations for adapting the site to our use, but that is still under review by SLD 45." (6/30)

Guardians on the West Coast: The Space and Missile Technology Center and Vandenberg Museum (Source: Space Review)
Last week a new museum opened outside the gates of Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Dwayne Day provides an overview of the museum’s development and its contents. Click here. (7/1)
 
Taiwan’s Satellites: A Lawfare Vulnerability and an Option to Cure and Enhance Deterrence Against the PRC (Source: Space Review)
Taiwan has a small but growing fleet of satellites, but could those satellites be in legal jeopardy ahead of any conflict involving China? In the first of a three-part report, Michael Listner sets the legal stage regarding ownership of space objects. Click here. (7/1)
 
Assigning an Identification to a Satellite, Revisited (Source: Space Review)
Analysts use various techniques to identify new space objects. Charles Phillips reexamines one approach he uses to help identify objects that are associated with one another, such as being on the same launch. Click here. (7/1)

UK Space Forge Satellite to Create Semiconductors in Low Earth Orbit — Could Advance AI Data Centers (Source: Tom's Hardware)
Manufacturing advanced computer components of the future may take place in space rather than on Earth. Space Forge, a UK-based startup, had its ForgeStar-1 satellite launched into orbit via SpaceX, paving the way for the satellite to ignite its forge and begin producing semiconductors in space.

ForgeStar-1 is officially the UK's first ever in-space manufacturing satellite, enabling the company to build semiconductors in space. The satellite was entirely designed and built in Cardiff, Wales, and launched into space as part of SpaceX's Transporter-14 rideshare mission. (6/28)

Space Shuttle Discovery's Potential Move to Houston Could Cost $300M-$400M, Smithsonian Says (Source: KHOU)
Texas Republicans want to bring Space Shuttle Discovery to town, but its current owners say Sen. Ted Cruz’s estimate to move the veteran spacecraft is way off. The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum confirmed to the Houston Business Journal that it provided a cost estimate of $300 million-$400 million to Congress this week as the Senate deliberates a massive spending package. (6/27)

What Happens When a Black Hole Devours a Neutron Star: Star Quakes and Monster Shock Waves (Source: SciTech Daily)
To explore the extreme physics behind this violent cosmic encounter, researchers turned to supercomputers. In a recent study, a team created the most detailed simulation yet of what happens just before a neutron star is swallowed. Their model shows how, about one second before the merger, the neutron star’s crust begins to crack apart in a massive quake triggered by the black hole’s intense gravity.

“The neutron star’s crust will crack open just like the ground in an earthquake,” Most says. “The black hole’s gravity first shears the surface, causing quakes in the star and the opening of rifts.” When a neutron star fractures -- a brief milliseconds-long window -- the most powerful predicted shock waves in the universe shoot outward from the star. (6/24)

The U.S. Space Force Wants You … to Start a Business (Source: Inc.)
It all started with an online posting about the Department of Defense’s desires. Last year, Nicholas Mehrle, a scientist, heard that the Space Systems Command, a part of the Space Force, had a few requests for entrepreneurs and researchers—29 requests, actually. They wanted help solving a slew of problems relating to what’s known as space domain awareness: figuring out what’s coming and going from space, what might be a threat, and what objects in space are where.

Those problems were posted on the homepage of an organization the command had recently started called the Space Domain Awareness TAP Lab. It exists to better engage with early-stage companies and academics with solid space solutions, in part through an affiliated startup accelerator called Apollo. The TAP Lab and its Apollo Accelerator are part of an ecosystem of Defense Department-sponsored programs that foster cutting-edge private technology and help smooth (and quicken) the path for startups whose innovations could have national-security applications. (6/26)

Iran Threatens to Flog Elon Musk's Starlink Users (Source: Newsweek)
Iran's parliament has voted to ban Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet service, marking a sharp escalation in its crackdown on outside influence after U.S. and Israeli strikes. Users of the SpaceX-operated satellite service now face penalties of fines, flogging, or up to two years in prison if they are caught, according to state media.

The law, which also toughens espionage rules, targets foreign-backed dissent. Though pending final approval, it reflects Tehran's growing alarm over Starlink's role as a digital lifeline during internet blackouts and a potent symbol in its information war with the West. (6/30)

Doubts That Eutelsat Can Answer Starlink Challenge (Source: CNBC)
Even though Eutelsat has been ramping up investments in LEO satellite with its OneWeb unit, experts say its technical architectures and orbital designs are ultimately different from Starlink’s. “The OneWeb constellation currently uses a bent-pipe architecture, which is not as capable as Starlink satellites; therefore, OneWeb will also need to invest in second-generation satellites.”

The French firm’s use cases also differ to Starlink’s. Eutelsat operates a constellation of geostationary orbit (GEO) as well as LEO satellites. “Eutelsat’s higher altitude satellites are leveraged for specialized use cases, such as polar coverage for companies and research facilities in remote regions like Greenland and Alaska,” said Joe Vaccaro. (6/30)

NASA Opportunity for Simulated Space Environment Testing (Source: NASA)
NASA invites interested government and commercial organizations to submit ideas for simulated space environment testing at Kennedy Space Center, utilizing the spaceport’s Launch Equipment Test Facility (LETF). The LETF is designed to test all physical aspects of a launch vehicle’s performance, from components to loads to full-scale systems probes involving cryogenic commodities. Interested parties are encouraged to submit ideas by July 11, 2025. Click here. (6/30)

June 30, 2025

Bill Nelson: In the Quest to Shrink NASA, Trump Forgets National Security (Source: New York Times)
A December 2023 incursion by drones over the Eastern US lasted 17 days. To my knowledge, we still do not know their origin or purpose, or how much of a threat they posed. But it was thanks to NASA technology that they were even picked up in the first place. The Air Force base did not have that capability. If a drone incursion could do something like this at Langley, what would stop a determined adversary from launching a flock of spacecraft-downing drones at Florida, California, and Virginia spaceports?

These aren’t just sites for launching rockets into space and delivering NASA payloads into orbit — they’re strategic targets vital to the defense of our homeland. The Trump administration’s proposal to cut NASA to the bone — including a nearly 50 percent reduction in science funding — jeopardizes the country’s pursuit of discovery and undermines capabilities that are essential in an era when rivals are advancing in terrestrial and extraterrestrial arenas. Far from a bold vision for American leadership, the administration has presented Congress with a blueprint for falling catastrophically behind.

The next giant leap is not about planting flags and leaving footprints; it’s about who will define the future and write the rules. The choice before us is stark: cut support to NASA and shrink from the unknown, or step boldly toward it and champion the agency to take us there. (6/29)

Earth-Sized Planets Commonly Found Around Smallest Stars (Source: Space Daily)
Astronomers at Heidelberg University's Konigstuhl Observatory have found that Earth-sized planets are particularly prevalent around low-mass stars, according to new findings from the CARMENES project. The study led to the discovery of four new exoplanets and offers compelling evidence that stars with less than one-sixth the mass of our Sun frequently host terrestrial worlds.

The observations were conducted using the CARMENES spectrograph at the Calar Alto Observatory in Spain. Developed at the Konigstuhl Observatory, the instrument targets M-dwarfs-stars with between one-tenth and one-half the Sun's mass. These small stars dominate the galaxy in number and exhibit minute wobbles due to the gravitational pull of orbiting planets, which CARMENES detects via radial velocity measurements. (6/30)

Defense Department to End Satellite Data Programs Used for Storm Forecasts (Source: Space Daily)
With the of peak hurricane season looming, forecasters will be without key information starting Monday because the Defense Department said it will no longer provide them with data from the weather satellites. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration published a notice Wednesday about the change. (6/28)

EchoStar Bankruptcy Threat Softens (Source: Space News)
EchoStar has pulled back from its threat to file for bankruptcy as talks with the FCC continue. The company said last week it would make overdue interest payments on its debt within a 30-day grace period after withholding those funds earlier this month amid uncertainty over its standing with the FCC. The commission is reviewing EchoStar’s compliance with both the buildout of a terrestrial network as well as use of 2-gigahertz satellite spectrum. EchoStar said in a regulatory filing that President Trump had recently encouraged the parties involved to reach an amicable resolution. EchoStar cautioned, though, that it would not make its next interest payment on July 1, triggering another 30-day grace period. (6/30)

Xona Raises $92 Million for NavSat System (Source: Xona)
Xona Space Systems raised $92 million for development of a navigation satellite system. The company said last week it raised the Series B round from investors led by Craft Ventures. The total amount included $20 million from a Strategic Funding Increase award from SpaceWERX. Xona is developing a low Earth orbit constellation of satellites to provide navigation services that are more robust than those from medium Earth orbit systems like GPS. The company launched its first “production-class” satellite, Pulsar-0, last week on the SpaceX Transporter-14 rideshare mission. The funding will allow Xona to scale up its constellation to hundreds of satellites in the next few years. (6/30)

DoD Weather Data Loss Worries Meteorologists (Source: Scientific American)
Meteorologists are worried about the loss of data from military weather satellites. The Defense Department is cutting off access to microwave sounding data from its DMSP weather satellites, effective Monday. The Defense Department did not disclose a reason for ending access to the data, which will remain available for military weather forecasters, but some reports cited unspecified security concerns. Forecasters say the loss of the DMSP microwave data will hinder their ability to monitor tropical weather systems just as the Atlantic hurricane season is starting. (6/30)

June 29, 2025

Blue Origin’s New Shepard Completes 33rd Mission to Space (Source: Blue Origin)
Blue Origin successfully completed its 13th human spaceflight and the 33rd flight for the New Shepard program on Sunday from Texas. The crew included: Allie Kuehner and her husband, Carl Kuehner, Leland Larson, Freddie Rescigno, Jr., Owolabi Salis, and Jim Sitkin. Including today’s crew, New Shepard has now flown 70 people to space, including four who have flown twice. (6/29)

Space Systems Command Picks SpaceX to Launch Weather Satellite (Source: SSC)
Space Systems Command sets the stage to enhance global weather sensing and prediction model performance, along with research, development, and prototyping capabilities through award of latest National Security Space Launch Phase 3 Lane 1 task order. The $81,613,951 multi-manifest mission awarded to SpaceX makes use of available launch vehicle capacity to efficiently deliver capability to orbit. (6/27)

Rocket Lab Completes Record Launch Turnaround, Successfully Deploys 68th Electron Mission (Source: Rocket Lab)
Rocket Lab Corporation (Nasdaq: RKLB) (“Rocket Lab” or “the Company”), a global leader in launch services and space systems, today successfully launched its 68th Electron rocket to deploy a single satellite to space for a confidential commercial customer. The mission was the second of two launches from the same launch site in less than 48 hours, a new launch record for the Company as it continues to deliver dedicated, repeatable and reliable access to space for satellite operators. (6/28)

Col. Brian Chatman Named New Commander of Space Launch Delta 45, Director of the Eastern Range (Source: Space Coast Daily)
Colonel Brian L. Chatman is the Space Launch Delta 45 installation commander and the Director of the Eastern Range at Patrick Space Force Base and Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. As the SLD 45 commander, he runs the world’s busiest spaceport and is responsible for delivering infrastructure, operations, and support for all Eastern Range launch and test missions. As Director of the Eastern Range, he is responsible for the safety of launch and test operations across a 15-million-square-mile area.

Editor's Note: This was previously a role reserved for one-star general officers. I hear the shift to a colonel slot is due to ongoing plans to shrink DoD's general officer numbers. (6/28)

Firefly Advances Eclipse Launcher, Blue Ghost Lunar Lander, Ocula Imaging Service (Source: NSF)
Firefly Aerospace is continuing to make good progress toward the debut of the company’s next-generation launch vehicle, Eclipse, in partnership with Northrop Grumman. Firefly also announced Ocula, a new commercial lunar imaging service that will utilize the company’s Elytra orbital spacecraft bus. Additionally, the company is continuing to develop the lander and payloads for its second Blue Ghost mission to the Moon. (6/27)

Canadian Space Agency Allocates $5.5 Million for 2025 FAST Program (Source: SpaceQ)
The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) has allocated up to $5.5 million for the 2025 Flights and Fieldwork for the Advancement of Science and Technology (FAST) program. The CSA posted the 2025 FAST announcement of opportunity (AO) on its website this week. FAST is open to Canadian universities and post-secondary institutions and the funding is in the form of grants. (6/27)

OSHA Investigating Crane Collapse at SpaceX's South Texas Site (Source: Houston Chronicle)
A few days after a Starship rocket exploded while it was on a test stand in preparation for the next flight test, SpaceX's Starbase facilities experienced another hazard. On Tuesday, video captured by LabPadre during a livestream showed a crane collapsing at the Starbase site. SpaceX and the city of Starbase did not respond to a request for comment about the crane's collapse, but federal safety regulators are conducting a probe. (6/27)

Vision Unveiled to Position EU as Leader in Space Economy (Source: Silicon Republic)
On Wednesday (June 25), the European Commission unveiled its ‘Vision for the European Space Economy’, an initiative that aims to position the EU as a global leader in the space economy by 2050. The Vision outlines a strategy to ensure Europe captures a strong share of the global space market, while reinforcing its autonomy and technological edge, establishing over 40 actions to strengthen the EU’s space ecosystem.

Among these is the call to launch a ‘Space Team Europe’ – a high-level, inclusive forum of European space stakeholders including European Space Agency (ESA) and the EU Agency for the Space Program (EUSPA) “to unify fragmented efforts and consolidate capabilities across the EU”. (6/27)

Can China’s Commercial Space Firms Replicate SpaceX Magic? (Source: Straits Times)
The number of rocket launches in China by both state-owned and private firms is expected to hit a record high in 2025, according to Chinese industry reports, amid plans to ramp up investment in the sector. So far, China has carried out more than 30 orbital launches, including at least six in June, with more on the horizon. In 2024, the country recorded 68 orbital launches and in 2023, 67 launches. China’s space sector used to be tightly controlled by the state, until it was opened up to private companies in 2015. (6/27)

Orbex Pushes Saxavord Blast-Off Back to 2026 (Source: The Herald)
The first launch of one of the rockets scheduled to blast off from Scotland’s spaceport has been pushed back until next year. Rocket company Orbex had intended to stage a launch later this year from SaxaVord on Shetland, but has now said that it will happen in 2026. “Moving parts” - including infrastructure requirements and engagement with regulators – have been blamed for the delay. 

The hold-up means there is something of a space race taking place in Scotland. German company RFA, which already test-fired a rocket on the SaxaVord launchpad, has said it intends to launch from Shetland this year – meaning this would be the first rocket to use the site. (6/27)

ASI Taps OHB to Develop Lunar Oxygen Extraction Mission (Source: European Spaceflight)
The Italian space agency (ASI) has awarded OHB a contract to develop its ORACLE mission, which aims to validate technology for the extraction of oxygen from lunar regolith on the surface of the Moon. Work on the Oxygen Retrieval Asset by Carbothermal-reduction in Lunar Environment (ORACLE) mission began in July 2023 when ASI signed an agreement with the Polytechnic University of Milan (Politecnico di Milano) to start developing the core technology. (6/27)

Satellites Keep Breaking Up in Space. Insurance Won't Cover Them (Source: Space.com)
Airplane passengers crossing the Indian Ocean who peered out their windows on Oct. 19, 2024, might have seen what looked like a fast-moving star suddenly flash and fade. Above their heads, a $500 million satellite was exploding. Operators confirmed the destruction of the Intelsat-33e satellite two days later.

There was a bright flash as the satellite's fuel ignited, followed by the flickering of the debris cloud as it fragmented into at least 20 pieces. Those satellite parts are now zooming around Earth, along with around 14,000 tonnes of space debris. The satellite wasn't insured.

As space junk increases, more operators are choosing to launch without any insurance at all. To compensate, companies are cutting back on the cost of satellites and launching more of them at faster rates, thus creating a feedback loop as the cheaper satellites break up more easily and add to the problem. "I don't think it's sustainable," said Massimiliano Vasile. (6/28)

June 28, 2025

UK Space Command Rises to Meet Challenges (Source: The National)
When Britain’s military realized it had to have much better “situational awareness” in space, it set up Space Command in 2021. It has since grown to a force of more than 600 personnel, three quarters from the RAF, based at former Bomber Command headquarters near High Wycombe, housed in a series of unremarkable 1930s redbrick buildings that had been designed to resemble a village to put off German bombers in the Second World War. (6/27)

Japan Launches GOSAT-GW on 50th and Final Liftoff of the H-2A Rocket (Source: Space.com)
JAXA on Saturday conducted its 50th and final launch of the H-2A rocket, taking the GOSAT-GW dual-purpose satellite to space. The mission lifted off from the Tanegashima spaceport in Japan. The Greenhouse Gas and Water Cycle Observation Satellite (GOSAT-GW) is the latest in Japan's efforts to observe changes in water cycles and greenhouse gases. (6/28)

Musk Rips Into ‘Utterly Insane’ Trump-Backed Megabill (Source: CNBC)
Elon Musk said that President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” will “destroy millions of jobs in America and cause immense strategic harm to our country!” Musk’s prior criticisms of the spending package triggered a public feud between the two men even though the Tesla and SpaceX CEO had been the president’s biggest financial backer. (6/28)

SpaceX Sends Two Batches of Starlink Satellites on Saturday Doubleheader (Source: Space.com)
Two Falcon 9 rockets carrying the broadband internet satellites lifted off Saturday, the first from the Cape Canaveral Spaceport and the second from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. (6/28)

Confirmed – First Animal on Earth to Live Without Oxygen (Source: Union Rayo)
Henneguya salminicola is a very small parasite that lives inside certain fishes. At first sight, it might not seem like a big deal because it has less than 10 cells, it doesn’t move on its own and it needs to live inside another organism to survive. However, it is a radical change in animal biology.

What’s peculiar about Henneguya salminicola is that it doesn’t have mitochondrial genes, this means that it lacks genetic instructions so that its cells use oxygen as an energy source. Every animal that has been known, mitochondria is the one in charge of processing oxygen and nutrients to generate this energy, but the Henneguya salminicola doesn’t.

Basically, this animal does all its cycle of life without needing oxygen, something never seen before. This was something scientists couldn’t believe and they have come up with some theories. This has been relevant for astrobiology, the science studying the possibility of life out of Earth. So, another question is set out about animals living without oxygen on other planets, with different atmospheres. If there is one on Earth, why wouldn’t the presence of this animal or a similar one that doesn’t need oxygen to live possible in other parts of the universe? (6/27)

New Propulsion Systems Could Enable a Mssion to Sedna (Source: Phys.org)
In the outer reaches of our solar system, far beyond the orbit of Pluto, lies Sedna, one of the most mysterious objects ever discovered. This reddish dwarf planet follows such an extreme orbit that it takes more than 11,000 years to complete a single journey around the sun. Now, scientists are proposing a new mission to reach this distant world using a revolutionary propulsion technology.

A new feasibility study has examined two cutting-edge approaches to technology that would reach Sedna within this narrow window of opportunity. The first involves the direct fusion drive (DFD), a conceptual nuclear fusion engine, designed to produce both thrust and electric power. For the DFD, researchers assume a 1.6 MW system with constant thrust and specific impulse, representing a massive leap beyond current propulsion technology. (6/27)

AST SpaceMobile Pitches US Military on Using Its Satellites for 'Tactical Communication' (Source: PC Magazine)
Starlink rival AST SpaceMobile is pitching its satellite-to-phone technology to US military groups, a sign that AST and SpaceX are poised to go head-to-head in competing for defense contracts. Texas-based AST SpaceMobile has already demonstrated that its giant satellites can power voice and video calls on consumer smartphones in cellular dead zones.

But on Thursday, the company touted a successful demo of its technology for "tactical satellite communication" purposes. The demo, conducted in Hawaii, involved using AST's BlueBird satellites to beam communications to a Tactical Assault Kit (TAK), which is usually mapping-related software designed for military operations. TAK can also be installed on smartphones. (6/26)

NASA Is in Full Meltdown (Source: Futurism)
Along with staring down the barrel of major program and staffing cuts, Janet Petro may also have to serve out the rest of the year as an acting administrator. Despite her well-regarded reputation as the first woman to lead the Kennedy Space Center, Petro isn't tight with the Trump crowd and is unable to make big decisions for the agency — including about its forthcoming budget.

The White House seems disinterested in appointing a new administrator after rescinding the nomination of Jared Isaacman, the billionaire space tourist who Elon Musk put up for the job, over his past donations to Democrats. "I think the best guess would tell you that it's hard to imagine it happening before the next six months, and could perhaps go longer than that into the eight- or nine-month range," the chief of staff said. "But that's purely speculation."

One of the agency's leaders perhaps put it best when, in an interview with Ars on condition that their name be withheld, they succinctly quipped that "NASA is f**ked." (6/27)

SpaceX Reacts to Mexico President’s Comment on Debris Contamination From Latest Explosion (Source: Valley Central)
On Wednesday, Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum said her administration was studying contamination from the Starbase facility near the Mexican border. Sheinbaum responded to a reporter’s question during her daily news briefing, saying, “There is a general review underway of the international laws that are being violated.” She added that her administration would then see what steps to take with the company, because “there is contamination.”

On Thursday, SpaceX took to X, formerly known as Twitter, to quote-tweet an article from Bloomberg that reported the Mexican President’s remarks. “As previously stated, there are no hazards to the surrounding area. Previous independent tests conducted on materials inside Starship, including toxicity analyses, confirm they pose no chemical, biological, or toxicological risks,” SpaceX began.

SpaceX stated that despite its attempts to recover the anomaly-related debris, “which is and remains the tangible property of SpaceX, these attempts have been hindered by unauthorized parties trespassing on private property.” SpaceX reported that it has requested local and federal assistance from the Mexican government in the recovery of the debris. They claim to have offered resources and assistance in the cleanup and have sought validation of their right to conduct recovery operations. (6/26)

Trump Wants 3000+ NASA Workers to Leave (Source: NASA Watch)
"I have heard from 6 senior people today that RIFs at NASA are openly discussed – now – as a distinct possibility. Indeed NASA management is being told to urge more people to leave in advance. Casey, Janet, Vanessa et al are playing with semantics as they did today at the Town Hall when they try and convince you otherwise. NASA Needs at least 3,000+ more people to be gone according to existing downsizing plans." (6/27)

Italy Approves Space Economy Law (Source: ITA)
In June 2025, Italy approved the country’s first space economy framework law that fills a regulatory gap in private sector space activities and aligns with international standards.  The law mandates both national and foreign operators to obtain authorization to operate from the Ministry of Enterprises and Made in Italy (MiMiT, delegated authority for space) through the Italian Space Agency (ASI), the regulatory and enforcement authority with oversight of the registration of space objects launched from Italy. (6/25)

Kongsberg Completes N3X Satellite Network for Maritime Surveillance (Source: Space Daily)
Kongsberg Defense and Aerospace has finalized its N3X satellite constellation with the successful launch of two new microsatellites, ARVAKER 2 and ARVAKER 3, aboard SpaceX's Transporter-14 mission from California. The N3X network is engineered to strengthen Norway's maritime domain awareness. (6/26)

Varda Unveils W4 Spacecraft with First FAA Part 450 Reentry License and New Satellite Bus (Source: Space Daily)
Varda Space Industries launched its fourth mission, W-4, on Sunday, marking the inaugural flight of a fully integrated spacecraft built entirely in-house at its El Segundo facility. The mission, which took off aboard a SpaceX Transporter-14 rideshare from Vandenberg Space Force Base at 2:25 pm PT, represents several operational milestones for the company.

Unlike prior missions, Varda independently developed and operates every component of the W-4 spacecraft aside from the launch vehicle. This includes the capsule, heatshield, satellite bus, and pharmaceutical payload. The mission architecture remains consistent with earlier flights, involving in-orbit pharmaceutical processing followed by high-speed Earth reentry and recovery. (6/26)

Six Satellites Launched for ICEYE as Constellation Expansion Gains Momentum (Source: Space Daily)
Six new Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellites built by ICEYE have successfully launched aboard the SpaceX Transporter-14 rideshare mission, marking the company's largest single deployment to date. The launch raises ICEYE's total number of deployed satellites to 54 and strengthens its position as the operator of the world's largest SAR satellite constellation.

The satellites, featuring 25 cm resolution class technology, represent the most advanced imaging capabilities in the industry. All units were integrated through Exolaunch and lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Base on June 23. ICEYE confirmed that each satellite has achieved communication and commissioning procedures are in progress. (6/26)

UC Davis and Proteus Space to Launch First-Ever Dynamic Digital Twin Into Space (Source: Space Daily)
The Center for Space Exploration Research at the University of California, Davis, has partnered with Proteus Space to launch a US government-sponsored satellite into space with a custom AI-enabled payload in a brand-new, first-ever rapid design-to-deployment small satellite. From the time the project was fully approved, the design and launch will occur within an unprecedented 13 months.

The satellite, which includes multiple commercial and research payloads, will monitor its own health in space using sensors that assess voltage and measurements of the batteries it is running on. The digital twin software will continually analyze the health and charge capacity of the battery. Using artificial intelligence, the digital twin will be aware of its own state and learn to predict its future state. (6/26)

With SLS Rocket Future Uncertain, L3Harris Still Cranking Out Engines (Source: Orlando Sentinel)
The first engine produced for the fifth mission, which was built from scratch after the depletion of the space shuttle supply, is now in NASA’s hands. On Friday, the engine, dubbed No. 20001, underwent an 8 1/2-minute hot fire on a test stand at NASA’s Stennis Space Center in Mississippi.

While the future of Artemis may shift, L3Harris will continue to build engines for which it has contracts. Manufacturing of the RS-25s happens in California. The newly manufactured engines cost 30% less than those produced and refurbished for the shuttle program, according to L3Harris, using updated processes such as 3D printing. A test version of the new engine design went through a 12-step certification series completed last year to pave the way for operational engine production.

NASA has already ordered up to 24 of the new engines on top of the 16 refurbished shuttle-era engines that would support flights through the ninth Artemis. The order totals $3.5 billion, which is about $145 million per engine. (6/24)

ULA Manages 2nd Launch of Year Hours After SpaceX’s 50th (Source: Orlando Sentinel)
United Launch Alliance took a week to reset, but was able to send up its second launch of the year, carrying more Amazon satellites to compete with SpaceX’s Starlink internet constellation. The launch came just hours after SpaceX sent up its 50th rocket from the Space Coast in 2025. (6/23)

Kennedy Space Center Goes Retro for Y2K After-Hours Event (Source: Orlando Sentinel)
Kennedy Under the Stars, an after-hours event at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, will carry a theme from a quarter-century ago. It’s set up for Y2K nostalgia. The event, set for 6:30 p.m. Aug. 30, allows access to many of the attraction’s exhibits, including Spaceport KSC, the Shuttle Launch Experience and Space Shuttle Atlantis plus a stargazing experience through telescopes provided by Ortega Observatory of Florida Tech.

On top of that are the most recent turn-of-the-century-inspired activities, including a video DJ in the Rocket Garden, a techno DJ dance party in NASA Central, mini-golf beneath the Saturn 1B rocket, science experiments, live entertainment and glowing lounge and bar areas. (6/26)

June 27, 2025

During a Town Hall NASA Officials on Stage Looked Like Hostages (Source: Ars Technica)
The four people at the helm of America's space agency held a town hall meeting with employees Wednesday, fielding questions about downsizing, layoffs, and proposed budget cuts that threaten to undermine NASA's mission and prestige. Janet Petro, NASA's acting administrator, addressed questions from an auditorium at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC. She was joined by Brian Hughes, the agency's chief of staff, a political appointee who was formerly a Florida-based consultant active in city politics and in Donald Trump's 2024 presidential campaign.

Two other senior career managers, Vanessa Wyche and Casey Swails, were also on the stage. They tried to put a positive spin on the situation at NASA. Petro, Wyche, and Swails are civil servants, not Trump loyalists. None of them looked like they wanted to be there. The town hall was not publicized outside of NASA ahead of time, but live video of the event was available—unadvertised—on an obscure NASA streaming website. The video has since been removed. (6/26)

UF Research: Muscle in Space Sheds Light on Ageing-Related Muscle Loss (Source: ISSCR)
Spaceflight with the associated absence of gravity and limited strain on muscles causes muscle weakness, a prominent feature of sarcopenia, within a short period of time, providing a time lapse view on age-related atrophy-associated changes in the muscle. This relatively short window of time in space provides a microgravity model for muscular aging and opens opportunities for studying sarcopenia, which normally takes decades to develop in patients on earth.

To understand the changes of muscle in microgravity, a team from the University of Florida engineered skeletal muscle microtissues from donor biopsies and launched them to the ISS aboard SpaceX CRS-25. The microtissues were taken from both young, active donors and from aged, sedentary donors and cultured in an automated mini lab, which besides regular feeding and monitoring of cultures also enabled electrical stimulation to simulate exercise.

On earth, the contraction strength of microtissues from young, active individuals was almost twice as much as the strength of tissues from older, sedentary individuals. After only two weeks in space, muscle strength trended to decline in the young tissues and was now more comparable to the strength of old tissues. A similar trend was seen for the muscle protein content. (6/26)

Latitude Commits €8M to Launch Facility in French Guiana (Source: European Spaceflight)
French launch services provider Latitude has announced that it will conduct the inaugural flight of its Zephyr rocket from the Guiana Space Centre in French Guiana. The company has committed €8 million to developing its section of a new commercial launch facility being constructed by the French space agency CNES on the grounds of the former Diamant launch complex.

The new commercial launch site at the Guiana Space Centre will accommodate up to five launch companies, with a combined maximum of 40 launches per year. The facility will offer shared resources as part of a €50 million development project led by CNES under the France 2030 program, alongside dedicated facilities for each launch company. Development of these dedicated facilities will be the responsibility of the individual companies. (6/26)

Starlink Satellite Antennae Plan Divides Swiss Village (Source: Swissinfo)
Starlink announced at the beginning of June its plans to build 40 antennae in Leuk. The facilities are to be erected on a site above the village, where several large satellite dishes are already installed. The German company Signalhorn submitted a corresponding application for commercial communications services in May.

In Leuk, people are skeptical about this plan, as an information event organized by Signalhorn clearly demonstrated. Over 100 people attended on Wednesday. “We were shocked when we learned about the planning application,” explained Hanna Schnyder from Leuk after the public discussion.

The doctor is primarily concerned about health and refers to a WHO study from May 2025. “This study concluded that there is no all-clear when it comes to high-frequency electromagnetic radiation. We don’t want to become the most irradiated area in Switzerland.” (6/26)

China Just Refueled a Satellite in Space. America Should Be Worried (Source: National Interest)
By demonstrating an on-orbit refueling capability, the Chinese are extending the reach and longevity of their dangerous co-orbital satellites. Private space trackers have detected a bizarre movement of Chinese satellites in geosynchronous orbit (GEO), the farthest orbit above the Earth. Speculation in the space community has been rampant, but the majority view—though unconfirmed—is that the Chinese have achieved a stunning feat.

Most experts believe that private space monitoring firms tracked and photographed one Chinese satellite in GEO refueling another satellite, marking a world first. This is a significant event, even though it has gotten very little coverage outside of a few trade publications. It appeared that the two satellites conducted a crucial and never-before-tried mid-orbit refueling. (6/26)

How China is Winning the Military Space Race (Source: Telegraph)
China is developing space-based military technology “breathtakingly fast”, the United States has warned. Gen Stephen Whiting, the top commander of the US Space Force (USSF), said China’s use of space to complete its “kill chain” – the process of identifying, tracking and attacking a target – had become “very concerning”. Space warfare capabilities are increasingly critical to the defense strategies of major powers.

Gen Anthony Mastalir said that China’s long-range weapons, including those specifically aimed at targeting the US and its allies, “depend on space”. He added that space tech was how China “closes its kill chain” and strikes its targets with precision. By the end of last year, China had more than 500 satellites capable of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR), according to the USSF. In the last decade, Beijing has deployed nearly 900 satellites into orbit. Of the 260 launched last year, 67 were capable of ISR. (6/26)

Starbase Zoning Rules Could Affect Land Not Owned by SpaceX (Source: Houston Chronicle)
Louis Balderas’ YouTube channel depends on a small piece of land in South Texas where his cameras watch SpaceX build and launch its Starship rocket. He’s leased this property for years – bringing in a steady stream of revenue with his channel – but this week said a new zoning ordinance could upend his business. His LabPadre Space YouTube channel has roughly 250,000 subscribers. “We feel that they could possibly try and make us remove our equipment.”

SpaceX and its employees own most of the land in Starbase. But some lots have other owners, and many of these are on an undeveloped swath of land that’s decently close to the launch pad – meaning the area must be evacuated for each liftoff – and is now designated as an open space. Texas law protects pre-existing land uses, but Starbase City Attorney Andy Messer, with municipal law firm Messer Fort, said Monday that zoning issues would be addressed on a “case-by-case basis.” (6/26)

Senate Budget Bill Would Boost Space Force to $40 Billion (Source: Space News)
A budget reconciliation bill in the Senate could boost Space Force spending to nearly $40 billion in 2026. The unprecedented budget structure, which defense officials describe as "one budget, two bills," would give the Space Force $26.1 billion in traditional discretionary funding while adding another $13.8 billion through the sweeping reconciliation package. The reconciliation bill also includes $25 billion for Golden Dome. The total $39.9 billion request would represent the most dramatic year-over-year increase for the military's newest service branch. However, the Pentagon said it has no backup plan for increasing defense spending if the bill fails. (6/27)

Space Force Pauses LEO Comsat Procurement, May Use SpaceX (Source: Space News)
The Space Force is pausing the procurement of the next set of low Earth orbit communications satellites as it studies whether to turn to SpaceX. The Trump administration's proposed 2026 budget would suspend procurement of data-transport satellites for the Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture (PWSA). The Space Development Agency had planned to procure up to 140 Tranche 3 satellites for that system in 2026 for launch in 2028.

The Space Force is instead considering using SpaceX's Starshield program, a militarized version of the company's commercial Starlink broadband satellites. Under that plan, the Tranche 3 satellites would be replaced with 480 Starshield satellites being procured for the "Milnet" program. That approach has raised concerns in industry about the health of satellite manufacturers and supply chains who built up their capabilities to support a steady stream of procurements for the PWSA constellations. (6/27)

Chinese Astronauts Perform TSS Spacewalk (Source: Space News)
Two Chinese astronauts performed a spacewalk outside the Tiangong space station Thursday. Chen Zhongrui and Chen Dong spent nearly six and a half hours outside the station on a spacewalk that concluded at 9:29 a.m. Eastern. The two installed debris shields on the exterior of the station and performed inspections of equipment. This was the second spacewalk for the two astronauts since they arrived at the station two months ago on the Shenzhou-20 spacecraft. The mission's third astronaut, Wang Jie, supported the spacewalk from inside the station. (6/27)

Rocket Lab Launches Four HawkEye 360 Satellites From New Zealand (Source: Space News)
Rocket Lab launched four satellites for HawkEye 360 Thursday in the first of back-to-back launches. An Electron rocket lifted off from the company's Launch Complex 1 in New Zealand at 1:28 p.m. Eastern, deploying its payload nearly an hour later. The rocket carried three Cluster 12 satellites HawkEye 360 will use for radio-frequency intelligence as well as a tech demo satellite, Kestrel-0A. Rocket Lab said after the launch it had rescheduled another Electron launch for a confidential customer, postponed from last week, to early Saturday. The two launches within 48 hours would be the shortest turnaround between Electron missions from Launch Complex 1. (6/27)

South Korea's LG Considering Space and Launch Business (Source: JoongAng Daily)
Korean conglomerate LG Group is looking to get into the space industry. Company executives met with officials from South Korea's space agency, KASA, on Friday to discuss cooperation on space activities. That included unspecified support for upcoming launches of South Korea's Naro rocket and work with a Korean startup on a small lunar rover. (6/27)

Former ISRO Chief Advising Skyroot Launcher (Source: Economic Times)
A former head of the Indian space agency ISRO is advising a launch startup in the country. Skyroot Aerospace said it named former ISRO chairman S Somanath as its honorary chief technical adviser. He will provide technical support as the company works on its Vikram small launch vehicle. Skyroot separately announced Thursday a memorandum of understanding with Axiom Space to examine how Skyroot could assist Axiom's commercial space station and other plans. (6/27)

Northrop Grumman Gifts $10M to Air and Space Museum (Source: WTOP)
Northrop Grumman has given $10 million to Washington, D.C.'s Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, which will rename its planetarium the Northrop Grumman Planetarium. The donation aids the museum's $285 million renovation goal of renovating the building and enhancing planetarium shows and exhibitions. (6/26)

Sierra Space Announces Opening of New “Power Station” Technology Center in Colorado as Defense Operations Grow (Source: Sierra Space)
Sierra Space, a leading commercial space company and defense tech prime that is building a platform in space to benefit and protect life on Earth, announced today a technology center expansion aimed at scaling up the production and delivery of the company’s groundbreaking Surface Mount Technology (SMT) solar power systems, including production for national defense applications.

Earlier this month, Sierra Space announced a new operation dedicated to supporting the national security space as a prime contractor — Sierra Space Defense — as well as unveiled their “Victory Works” manufacturing facility for defense satellites. (6/26)

Colorado University Expecting Cuts to its Space Program and Partnerships with NASA (Source: KKTV)
Officials at CU Boulder’s Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) say many of their projects that they partner with NASA on could be cut, as well as millions in funding across Colorado. The cuts are part of the “Big Beautiful Bill” being considered in Congress, which could make significant cuts to the federal budget in 2026.

CU representatives also say the cuts slash their funding by $54 million, with their total budget being about $200 million. But, they also expect cuts to many other jobs supported through NASA contracts in Colorado. (6/26)

NASA Tested a New SLS Booster That May Never Fly, and the End of it Blew Off (Source: Ars Technica)
NASA's Space Launch System appears to have a finite shelf life. The Trump administration wants to cancel it after just three launches, while the preliminary text of a bill making its way through Congress would extend it to five flights. But chances are low the Space Launch System will make it to nine flights, and if it does, it's questionable that it would reach that point before 2040.

For the second time in less than a week, NASA test-fired new propulsion hardware Thursday that the agency would need to keep SLS alive. Last Friday, a new liquid-fueled RS-25 engine ignited on a test stand at NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi. Then, on Thursday of this week, NASA and Northrop Grumman test-fired a new solid rocket booster in Utah. This booster features a new design that NASA would use to power SLS rockets beginning with the ninth mission, or Artemis IX.

While the engine test in Mississippi apparently went according to plan, the ground firing of the new solid rocket booster didn't go quite as smoothly. Less than two minutes into the burn, the motor's exhaust nozzle violently shattered into countless shards of debris. Northrop Grumman has had a tough time with rocket nozzles in recent years. In 2019, a test motor for the company's now-canceled Omega rocket lost its nozzle during a test-firing in Utah. Then, last year, a smaller Northrop-made booster flying on United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rocket lost its nozzle in flight. (6/26)

Utahns Build, Test Largest NASA Rocket Ever Produced in Promontory (Source: FOX 13)
NASA and Northrop Grumman successfully tested the most powerful segmented solid rocket motor ever created at Promontory Point in Box Elder County on Thursday. Hundreds gathered to witness the historic test of the Booster Obsolescence and Life Extension (BOLE) booster, where FOX 13 News cameras captured incredible footage of the powerful demonstration.

"This booster is a totally new booster. It's the first tip to tail new booster that NASA has tested since about 1975," said Dave Reynolds at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center. The test produced a spectacular light show and ground-shaking power that could be heard "miles and miles around," according to Reynolds. The booster performed perfectly for about 100 seconds before experiencing two explosions related to the nozzle. (6/27)

Fireball in the Sky as Suspected Meteor Rattles Southeast US, Crashes Through Roof (Source: Guardian)
A “fireball” that may have been a meteor burned through the sky on Tuesday just after noon in north Georgia, with a meteorite fragment crashing through the roof of a house in metro Atlanta. “It pierced through the roof all the way through and cracked through the laminate flooring to the concrete,” said Ryan Morrison, director of emergency management for Henry county, a suburban area south-east of Atlanta.

The homeowner requested the homeland security office refrain from identifying them, because they have a small child. The fireball resembled a lightning strike on the service’s global lightning mapper, he said. The Atlanta area has had a spate of strong lightning storms over the last day, which led many to dismiss the boom as more lightning. (6/26)

SSC and Firefly Progress Toward Orbital Launch from Esrange (Source: Firefly)
Swedish Space Corporation (SSC) and Firefly Aerospace are moving closer to a historic first satellite launch from Esrange Space Center in Kiruna, Sweden, following a Technology Safeguards Agreement (TSA) that was signed between Sweden and the United States on June 20. Infrastructure development at SSC’s Esrange Space Center is progressing for Launch Complex 3C where Firefly’s Alpha rocket will launch. The tracking and control systems, security and depot facilities, and the Launch Control Center have already been stood up. (6/25)

Is Eutelsat Europe’s Answer to Musk’s Starlink? (Source: France24)
With around 650 satellites in orbit, Eutelsat is the only other largescale LEO satellite provider in the world, but still lags far behind Starlink’s 7,500 units. Closing the gap between the two companies is more than a matter of financial investment.
“Although Europe is trying to catch up, it's a way behind in terms of the technology,” says Barry Evans.

In the US, Starlink is already providing a service that beams internet direct to handheld devices – a capability that does not yet exist in Europe. While Eutelsat provides a more reliable service as its terminals must be professionally installed, Starlink’s satellites are located at lower altitudes, thereby reducing latency. (6/25)

Starlink’s South African Dream May Face a Two-Year Delay (Source: TechNext)
South Africa’s quest for high-speed satellite internet via Starlink has hit a significant roadblock. According to ICT regulatory expert Dominic Cull, it may take at least two years for Starlink to secure a license to operate in South Africa owing to the country’s complex Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) regulations. Speaking at the Wapaloza 2025 conference, Cull highlighted the slow pace of regulatory reform, dashing hopes for a swift Starlink South Africa rollout. (6/25)

Starbase Lockdown: SpaceX City Blocks Public Roads, Raising Legal Questions (Source: San Antonio Express News)
Citing safety and security issues, city officials approved four gates to limit public access to the community’s residential areas. At least three are already in place, raising questions about the legality of blocking public roads and the private space company’s long-term plans. While the barriers don’t impact the public’s access to nearby Boca Chica Beach, some property owners and residents are decrying the move as another step in SpaceX CEO Elon Musk’s creeping takeover of the area. (6/25)

UCF Student Explores Bridges Between Health in Space and Health on Earth (Source: UCF)
In the lead-up to a conversation with Luis Jimenez-Chavez ’22, it might be a good idea to prepare the brain for a serious workout. He’ll be talking about his research, which spans microgravity, mitochondria, galactic cosmic radiation, biophysics, bone density and the complexities of DNA.

At some point, the conversation will turn to his collaboration with NASA, the impact of his research on astronaut immunology, its potential implications for cancer patients and his presentation to a Nobel Prize winning cancer researcher. It will eventually land on an amazing family background that puts all of the above into proper perspective.

“The dreams of my uncles rubbed off on me, but mostly it was my dad,” he says. “His dream was to be a scientist at NASA and find cures for illnesses. He didn’t personally live his NASA dream, but 50% of me — Luis — is my dad’s DNA. So, whenever I’m at NASA, it’s like he’s there, too. That’s why I enjoy conversations like this — because everything I discuss is an accomplishment for my entire family.” (6/25)

UCF Scientists Process Axiom-4 Astronaut Health Samples for Space Medicine Research (Source: WESH)
Several weeks before this historic flight, which aims to take humans in orbit across the Earth's North and South poles for the first time, UCF College of Medicine scientists collected blood, saliva, and urine samples from four astronauts. Dr. Michal Masternak, an anti-aging and cancer researcher, leads the College of Medicine program conducting the before-flight processing.

"When they collect the samples, they had to be processed within two hours from the flight, so I got this opportunity, and I didn't think twice. I said I want to be part of this project," Dr. Masternak said. (6/25)

Oman's Duqm Spaceport Plans Five Launches in 2025 (Source: Times Aerospace)
Oman’s new spaceport at Etlaq is aiming for five experimental launches by the end of this year. First announced in 2023, the spaceport in Duqm successfully launched its first experimental rocket in December 2024. A 6.5-meter tall rocket, named Duqm-1, rose to an altitude of 140km above sea level, crossing the Karman line.

Chief commercial officer, Julanda al Riyami, said the next rocket launch, called Unity-1, is expected in April and will be facilitated by UK-based launch company Advanced Propulsion Technologies. The second will be the launch of the Duqm-2 rocket in June, facilitated by New Zealand-based Stellar Kinetics, in partnership with Etlaq’s parent company, NASCOM.

Al Riyami said a more complex launch, utilising different parameters and operational procedures, is scheduled for October for rocket Duqm-3. The fourth launch, scheduled for November, is Kuwait Space Rocket’s Ambition-3. The last launch of this year, currently scheduled for December, is once again for Duqm-3. Etlaq’s full-scale commercial operations are scheduled for 2027. (6/25)

UN and JAXA Open Opportunity for ISS Cubesats (Source: UNOOSA)
The United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA), in collaboration with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), has opened the ninth round of applications for the United Nations/Japan Cooperation Programme on CubeSat Deployment from the International Space Station (ISS) Japanese Experiment Module "KiboCUBE".

KiboCUBE provides teams from government organizations, research institutes, universities and other public organizations from developing countries the opportunity to develop, build, and ultimately deploy a One Unit (1U) Cube Satellite (CubeSat) from the Japanese Experiment Module “Kibo” on the International Space Station (ISS). (6/25)

How Do Scientists Calculate the Probability That an Asteroid Could Hit Earth? (Source: The Conversation)
When scientists spot an asteroid whose trajectory might take it close to Earth, they monitor it frequently and calculate the probability that it might collide with our planet. As they receive more observational data, they get a better picture of what could happen. Just having more data points early doesn’t make scientists’ predictions better. They need to keep following the asteroid as it moves through space to better understand its trajectory.

The impact probability describes how likely a hazardous asteroid is to hit Earth. For example, if the impact probability is 1%, it means that in 1 of 100 cases, it hits Earth. One in 100 is kind of rare, but still too close for comfort if you’re talking about the odds of a collision that could devastate Earth.

Any uncertainty in the calculation of the object’s orbit causes variations in the predicted solution. Instead of one precise orbit, the calculation usually gives scientists a cloud of its possible orbits. The ellipse enclosing these locations is called an error ellipse. The impact probability describes how many orbital predictions in this ellipse hit the Earth. (6/25)

Senate Panel Approves Bedford FAA Nomination (Source: AIN)
The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee today narrowly approved the nomination of Bryan Bedford to serve as FAA administrator, clearing the way for Senate floor consideration. The 15-to-13 vote in the committee came as the nomination has drawn opposition from the Democrat leadership and others, such as famed pilot Sully Sullenberger, over his stance on the 1,500-hour rule. (6/25)

NASA's Been Pulling Out of Major Astronomy Meetings — and Scientists are Feeling the Effects (Source: Space.com)
Something was missing at the American Astronomical Society's 246th meeting this year, a conference sometimes referred to as the "Superbowl of Astronomy." It's a meeting that brings many of the country's most renowned scientists into the same room to share what they've been working on and thinking about lately; as you can imagine, that tends to organically foster brand new ideas for exploring the universe.

Being at these events, you can almost feel study blueprints sprouting up all around you in real-time. It's electric. But this summer, NASA wasn't there. And in fact, the National Science Foundation cancelled its planned talk at the meeting, too. Scientists I spoke with found it pretty conspicuous for both NASA and NSF to pull out. It's also pertinent that this is the first AAS meeting to occur since the Trump administration took office and began implementing some hefty, controversial changes across these organizations. (6/26)