Here is a list of news that were published in our Newsletter the week of August 5, 2024:
Human Space Exploration:
- Life on the Moon: Lockheed Martin shares exploration vision for 2044
Coalition Member in the News – Lockheed Martin; - Terraforming Mars could be easier than scientists thought;
- NASA ‘getting more serious’ about backup plan to bring Starliner astronauts home if needed
Coalition Member in the News – Boeing; - Long-term Moon mission safety depends on sturdy infrastructure;
- SpaceX targeting August 26 for historic Polaris Dawn astronaut mission;
- Mars Society brings its convention – plus strategies for space startups – to Seattle;
- NASA pushes Crew-9 launch to September amid uncertainty of Starliner’s return timeline
Coalition Members in the News – Axiom Space, Boeing; - NASA chief will make the final decision on how Starliner crew flies home
Coalition Member in the News – Boeing; - Private Cygnus freighter arrives at the ISS with 4 tons of supplies (photos)
Coalition Member in the News – Northrop Grumman;
- Hungary and Poland to join India on Ax-4
Coalition Member in the News – Axiom Space; - GAO questions Gateway’s mass, schedule;
- Cygnus spacecraft suffers glitches after launch
Coalition Member in the News – Northrop Grumman;
Space Science
- These nearby star systems could be good targets in the search for alien life;
- Mars Express orbiter takes a deep dive into ancient Red Planet lake (images);
- NASA sends final command to its NEOWISE spacecraft, ending more than a decade of asteroid observations;
- James Webb Space Telescope finds a shock near supermassive black hole (image);
- If advanced civilizations are using quantum communications, is that why we’ve never seen them?;
- Earth’s ‘evil twin’ Venus may have mirrored our planet more than expected;
- NASA Moon probe plays laser tag with Japanese lunar lander;
- Was life on Earth sparked by cloud-to-ground lightning strikes?
- Astronomers see planets forming around binary stars;
- X-class solar flares;
- Mystery of Moon’s ‘tenuous’ atmosphere solved;
- China’s lunar samples contain graphene flakes;
Other News;
- SpaceX to build three new rocket landing zones on Space Coast as Starship planning proceeds;
- Commerce Department preparing to turn on initial version of space traffic coordination service;
- Chinese megaconstellation launch creates field of space debris;
- U.S. Army gears up for space warfare, drawing lessons from Ukraine;
- NASA budget pressures create opportunities for smallsats;
- Safran to open electric thruster production line in U.S.;
- China launches first satellites for Thousand Sails megaconstellation;
- Aerospace CEO lauds smallsat innovation and risk-taking;
- Intuitive Machines and SEOPS partner on lunar rideshare services;
- Aerospace CEO lauds smallsat innovation and risk-taking;
- Intuitive Machines and SEOPS partner on lunar rideshare services;
- Perseid meteor shower 2024 peaks this weekend. Here’s how to see summer’s best ‘shooting stars’;
- Canada strikes deal to use U.S. space tech, clearing way for rocket launch pad in N.S.
Major Space Related Activities for the Week
- Launched Sunday after a day’s weather delay, Northrop Grumman’s 21 NASA Cygnus resupply mission to the ISS experienced a thruster issue following separation from its Falcon 9 rocket. NASA and Northrop Grumman were working to determine if the rendezvous strategy for the Cygnus and its 8,200 pounds of crew supplies and scientific research with the ISS might change.
- NASA indicated previously that the agency and Boeing may have an update this week on the status of the extended Boeing CST-100 Starliner Crew Flight Test.
- Meanwhile, the 38th annual Smallsat conference is underway this week in Logan, Utah with the theme, “Automation: Enabling New Capabilities.”
- The annual Space and Missile Defense Forum takes place Tuesday through Thursday. On Wednesday, the Beyond Earth Institute is hosting a space debris webinar.
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