MDA highlights speedy tasking, broad coverage of Radarsat-2 follow-on
Monday, 27 September 2021 23:15
MDA’s Radarsat-2 follow-on will include a C-band synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) satellite in a mid-inclination orbit capable of collecting imagery in a 700 kilometer swath at a resolution of 50 meters per pixel.
Status of satellite unknown after China conducts pair of launches in 2 hours
Monday, 27 September 2021 21:19
The status of a classified satellite launched from southwest China Sept. 27 remains unknown more than 12 hours after liftoff.
Classified satellite declared lost after China launches twice in 2 hours
Monday, 27 September 2021 21:19
The status of a classified satellite launched from southwest China Sept. 27 remains unknown more than 12 hours after liftoff.
Atlas 5 launches Landsat 9
Monday, 27 September 2021 19:17
An Atlas 5 successfully launched the latest in the Landsat series of Earth science satellites Sept. 27, continuing a program that started nearly half a century ago.
Isotropic Systems completes funding for 2022 commercial launch
Monday, 27 September 2021 19:03
Isotropic Systems said Sept. 27 it raised more than $37 million to fully fund its flat-panel antennas through to product launch in 2022.
Terran Orbital to build plant to produce more than 1,000 satellites per year
Monday, 27 September 2021 18:26
Terran Orbital announced an agreement with Space Florida to establish a manufacturing facility on Florida’s Merritt Island large enough to produce more than 1,000 satellites per year.
Satellite maker Terran Orbital plans major plant in Florida
Monday, 27 September 2021 17:01
Space Health Institute Releases Postdoctoral Fellowship Solicitation
Monday, 27 September 2021 17:01
NASA to launch climate change-tracking Landsat 9 satellite
Monday, 27 September 2021 17:01
X-59 nose makes an appearance
Monday, 27 September 2021 17:01
Hughes conducts multi-orbit demonstration for resilient, secure UAV connectivity
Monday, 27 September 2021 17:01
Asteroid sample brought back to Earth gets close-up look
Monday, 27 September 2021 16:01
In December 2020, Japan's Hayabusa2 spacecraft swung by Earth to drop off a cache of rock samples taken from a near-Earth asteroid called Ryugu. Asteroids like Ryugu are thought to represent the ancient building blocks of the solar system, and scientists have been eager to get a closer look at the returned samples.
Last week, the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency shipped one of the samples—a millimeter-sized fragment from the asteroid's surface—to the laboratory of Brown University planetary scientist Ralph Milliken for analysis. Milliken's lab is one of the first in the U.S. to examine a Ryugu sample so far.
Milliken and Takahiro Hiroi, a senior research scientist at Brown, are members of the Hayabusa2 mission's science team.
Blue Origin unveils next flight, TMZ says Captain Kirk to be aboard
Monday, 27 September 2021 14:04
Blue Origin, the space company owned by Amazon's Jeff Bezos, announced plans on Monday for its next flight and the news and entertainment website TMZ said it may include a celebrity astronaut—William Shatner, who played Captain Kirk on "Star Trek."
TMZ reported that the 90-year-old Shatner would be on the October 12 voyage, making him the oldest person ever to go to space.
Blue Origin revealed the names of two members of the four-person crew but did not confirm that Shatner would be on the flight.
It said Chris Boshuizen, a former NASA engineer and co-founder of Planet Labs, and Glen de Vries, a co-founder of clinical research platform Medidata Solutions, would be on the rocket and the names of the two other astronauts will be revealed "in the coming days.
NASA wants to harvest water on moon and Mars, and students think they can help
Monday, 27 September 2021 13:45
Deep beneath Mars' red clay surface lie ancient oceans now frozen into ice sheets. Earth's moon has hidden water deposits, too—pockets embedded deep inside its rocks.
It's the kind of liquid treasure scientists at NASA hope to one day mine using specialized drilling tools on the moon or Mars.
As NASA looks for new technology to use in space, the agency is mining a different treasure to help develop those tools: the ingenuity of student engineers.
To that end, 10 student teams from universities around the country—including a team from Virginia Tech—gathered Friday at the Hampton Road Convention Center to share prototypes of remote-controlled drilling machines, during the "Moon to Mars Ice and Prospecting Challenge." The event was a three-day competition that began Thursday and ended Saturday.
The students' prototypes attempted to extract and harvest the most water from ice buried within simulated lunar and Martian landscapes—dirt, clay, sand—packed inside giant blue tubs. It's a technology NASA needs. Rather than sending tons of water into space with the astronauts, it's easier and saves millions to extract the water there.
"The most interesting thing about this is it has to be completely hands off.
RocketStar ready for second suborbital flight attempt
Monday, 27 September 2021 13:32
New York-based RocketStar plans to launch its aerospike-powered rocket for the first time this fall, carrying a prototype satellite for resource-mapping startup Lunasonde on a brief suborbital trip.