China designates space sector an “emerging pillar
industry,” sets deep space ambitions in new economic blueprint.
SpaceNews.com article.
Pull quote: “These are sectors expected to become foundational drivers of
economic growth, likely meaning they will benefit from strong policy support,
state financing and industrial development programs. The move suggests Beijing
intends to expand the space sector beyond strategic state programs toward a
larger industrial ecosystem encompassing launch services, satellites and
downstream data applications.”
Asteroid 2024 YR4 will not impact the Moon. ESA.int article.
Pull quote: “Despite the challenges, the observations were a success. By
comparing 2024 YR4’s position relative to the background stars, the team was
able to measure its orbit accurately enough to rule out a lunar impact in 2032.”
Unlocking AI in space: the case for greater industry and
space agency collaboration. SpaceNews.com commentary.
Pull quote: “The opportunity is vast. From Earth observation satellites that
must process terabytes of sensor data in real-time to Mars rovers making
split-second navigation decisions millions of miles from human oversight, AI
promises to unlock unprecedented autonomous capabilities across the space
domain. Realizing this vision demands more than sophisticated algorithms. It
requires hardware engineered to withstand the universe’s most unforgiving
environments, where a single component failure can jeopardize a billion-euro
mission.”
Jared Isaacman on rebuilding, Artemis and what he’s
learned during his first months as NASA administrator. SpaceNews.com article.
Pull quote: “Probably one of the bigger surprises is that in certain areas
within NASA, we have either lost or outsourced some of our core competencies.
That was surprising. More or less 75% of our workforce is contractors. There’s
a lot of things that we have some external dependencies on that I would not
have expected. We’ve got to look at that. There has to be certain expertise
relevant to our mission that we retain inside the organization.”
Third Kairos launch fails. SpaceNews.com article. Pull
quote: “In a social media post, Space One, the company that operates Kairos,
said it activated the rocket’s flight termination system after it “determined
that mission success was difficult,” according to a machine translation. The
company did not immediately disclose additional details about the problem that
triggered the termination of the launch.”
On moonshots and Minneapolis. ScienceNews.org commentary.
Pull quote: “Maybe both things can be true. Space exploration “can be this
incredibly powerful thing that can bring us together,” Maher says. “It can also
be this thing, like a mirror, that illustrates that we have a lot of divisions
and problems. That’s the beauty of it, that it can do both things.””
Blue Origin’s surprise TeraWave constellation jolts LEO
broadband race. SpaceNews.com article. ““TeraWave will not be competing
with Amazon Leo,” Plucinsky said via email. “We identified an unmet need with
customers who were seeking enterprise-grade internet access with higher speeds,
symmetrical upload/download speeds, more redundancy, and rapid scalability for
their networks.””
Senate committee advances NASA authorization bill that
changes Artemis and extends ISS. SpaceNews.com article.
Pull quote: “The [Senate Commerce, Science, and Tranportation] committee passed
on a voice vote March 4 an amended
version of S. 933, a NASA authorization act originally introduced nearly a
year ago. The committee also approved nearly 20 additional amendments from
various committee members with the same vote.”
Backlog List
• ESA
weighing options to address exploration funding shortfall,
• New
ultraviolet image of comet 3I/ATLAS could help reveal what it's made of,
• Space
Development Agency Makes Awards to Build 72 Tracking Layer Satellites for
Tranche 3,
• Russia
is about to do the most Russia thing ever with its next space station,
• Blue
Origin breaks the accessibility barrier by sending the first wheelchair user to
space,
• Improved
‘Terminator’ sun model could change space weather forecasting,
• Desert
Works Propulsion expands U.S. ion propulsion capability through domestic
manufacturing partnership and test capacity growth,
• Record
launches, reusable rockets and a rescue: China made big strides in space in
2025,
• The
crash of the MIRA-I spaceplane is raising serious concerns in the space
industry, and
• HyPrSpace
looks for applications beyond launch for its hybrid propulsion technology.