Here is a list of news that were published in our Newsletter during the week of May 3, 2026:
Human Space Exploration
- Why we need to treat Earth like a spaceship;
- The Moonbase moment
Coalition Member in the News – Lockheed Martin; - To build a city on Mars, we might need to plunder the asteroid belt;
- Trump’s proposed NASA budget is a ‘horrible threat to our future’ in space, Planetary Society CEO says;
- NASA Laser Terminal enhances views during Artemis II mission;
- Artemis crew tells kids at town hall, Moon flight was “the best roller coaster ride you’ve ever been on”;
Space Science
- NASA’s Webb Space Telescope reveals a dark airless super-Earth that looks like Mercury;
- Astronomers unlock a sharper view from JWST using a ‘keyhole’ trick;
- Core of solar system’s largest moon may still be forming;
- Here’s what 6 years of driving on Mars did to the wheels on NASA’s Curiosity rover (video);
- How the rise of continents may have set the stage for life on Earth;
- Space junk falls back to Earth faster as sunspot numbers climb;
- Why does NASA’s Curiosity rover have a ‘lucky penny’ on Mars?;
- Jupiter is little smaller than we thought;
- A small object past Pluto may have a thin atmosphere;
- Interlune wins $6.9M NASA contract to create system to extract helium-3 and hydrogen from Moon dirt;
- Spaceflight is hard on the heart, yet artificial ones grow better in space than on Earth;
- Newton’s law of gravity passes its biggest test ever;
- DARPA selects three companies for lunar orbiter studies;
Other News
- China’s Nayuta Space raises fresh funding for aerodynamic-recovery rocket;
- ‘Whatever Russia is testing, it’s sophisticated’: 2 Russian satellites get within 10 feet of each other in orbit;
- Look up! The Halley’s comet meteor shower is just about to peak;
- Lockheed Martin joins collaboration with Firefly Aerospace and Seagate for off-shore launches
Coalition Members in the News – Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman; - SpaceX aims for mid-May Starship Flight 12 launch with revised trajectory;
- NASA’s Kennedy Space Center director retires on heels of Artemis II success;
Major Space-Related Activities for the Week
- Tuesday marks the 65th anniversary of the Mercury Freedom suborbital launch of NASA astronaut Alan Shepard on the first U.S. human spaceflight, which spanned about 15 1/2 minutes. As a follow up, President John F. Kennedy committed the U.S. to launch astronauts to the Moon with the Apollo program by the end of the decade;
- On Monday, Ireland is to become the 65th signatory to NASA’s Artemis Accords, a set of principles for the civil, peaceful, cooperative and transparent human exploration of the Moon, Mars and other deep space destinations;
- The four day, 2026 U.S. The Geospatial Intelligence Foundation (USGIF) conference got underway Sunday in Aurora, Colorado;
- The National Security Space Association (NSSA) is to hold an in-person briefing on the FY2027 national security space budget request on Thursday at 10:00 a.m. EDT from Arlington, Virginia;
- Meanwhile, the U.S. House and Senate are in recess this week, with the exception of pro forma sessions.
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