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Friday, 03 April 2026 12:10

Week in images: 30 March - 03 April 2026

The image from Copernicus Sentinel-3 shows a Saharan dust storm over the Atlantic Ocean, with the Canary Islands visible off the coast of Morocco.

Week in images: 30 March - 03 April 2026

Discover our week through the lens

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For the second consecutive year, the White House is proposing a major budget cut for NASA that would significantly impact the agency’s science programs and the International Space Station.

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Italy’s Argotec has officially opened its first U.S.

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NASA's FY2027 Budget Is a Bet on Artemis — and a Gamble Against Everything Else

The White House has proposed cutting NASA’s budget by 23% for the second year running, with a fiscal year 2027 proposal of $18.8 billion that would gut science programs, shutter education initiatives, and accelerate the drawdown of International Space Station operations. The one area that would see more money: Artemis and the lunar base. On […]

The post NASA’s FY2027 Budget Is a Bet on Artemis — and a Gamble Against Everything Else appeared first on Space Daily.

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Europe's Space Problem Isn't Technology — It's Structure

Europe’s window to become a serious space power is narrowing, and the continent’s leaders appear to know it. A recent SpaceNews analysis lays out the uncomfortable reality: the European Union’s dependence on foreign technology, fragmented governance, and relatively modest budgets are collectively threatening to sideline Europe in what defense and space strategists are calling the […]

The post Europe’s Space Problem Isn’t Technology — It’s Structure appeared first on Space Daily.

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The Orbital Turf War: How SpaceX and Amazon Are Turning Collision Avoidance Into a Regulatory Weapon

SpaceX and Amazon are fighting over who gets to fly where in low Earth orbit, and the Federal Communications Commission is caught in the middle of what amounts to a high-stakes real estate dispute in the crowded orbital environment. In an early April letter to the FCC, SpaceX accused Amazon of violating the orbital debris […]

The post The Orbital Turf War: How SpaceX and Amazon Are Turning Collision Avoidance Into a Regulatory Weapon appeared first on Space Daily.

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The full engineering history of Cassini's Grand Finale: how NASA deliberately crashed a $3.4 billion spacecraft into Saturn and why the decision took a decade to make

The decision to destroy Cassini wasn't made on impact day. It was the product of a decade of engineering trade studies, planetary protection ethics, and the recognition that responsible exploration means planning the ending with the same care as the beginning.

The post The full engineering history of Cassini’s Grand Finale: how NASA deliberately crashed a $3.4 billion spacecraft into Saturn and why the decision took a decade to make appeared first on Space Daily.

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European Space Companies Are Quietly Building America's Next Satellite Fleet

When Italy’s Argotec opened its first U.S. satellite production facility near Kennedy Space Center this April, it did not make front-page news. Neither did Belgium’s Aerospacelab when it inaugurated a factory in Torrance, California. But taken together, these moves — and the wave of European investment behind them — point to something the American space […]

The post European Space Companies Are Quietly Building America’s Next Satellite Fleet appeared first on Space Daily.

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