Here is a list of news that were published in our Newsletter the week of September 16, 2024:
Human Space Exploration:
- SpaceX Crew-9 astronaut launch delayed to September 26
Coalition Member in the News – Boeing; - I am Artemis: Chris Pereira
Coalition Members in the News – Aerojet Rocketdyne, L3Harris Technologies; - NASA’s uncrewed Artemis mission highlights radiation risk to astronauts;
- Intuitive Machines lands $4.8B NASA contract to build Earth-Moon communications infrastructure;
- Space Perspective sends balloon and capsule up 100K feet during Gulf of Mexico test flight;
- What the Polaris Dawn mission could reveal about human health in space;
- Russian cosmonauts Kononenko and Chub mark one year in space;
- Record-setting Polaris Dawn crew safely splashes down in Gulf of Mexico;
- Starliner astronauts adjust to long-term ISS stay
Coalition Member in the News – Boeing;
Space Science
- Europe’s Mars ‘fetch rover’ nails sample pick-up test in the field (video);
- Europa Clipper launch window extended;
- India approves Moon sample return, Venus orbiter, space station module and reusable launcher;
- 2nd Kuiper Belt? Our solar system may be much larger than thought;
- SETI scientists scan TRAPPIST-1 for technosignatures;
- Earth will have a tiny new mini-moon for a few months;
- Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS nears the Sun this month. Will it be visible to the naked eye?
- A $5 billion NASA mission looked doomed. Could engineers save it?
- NASA and ESA missions unexpectedly collaborate to reveal what accelerates solar winds;
- An ambitious mission to Neptune could study both the planet and Triton;
- Could we turn the Sun into a gigantic telescope?
- A gravity map of Mars uncovers subsurface mysteries;
- Astronauts 3D-print first metal part while on ISS;
Other News;
- Small launch vehicles press ahead despite market setbacks;
- Earth observation companies wary of Starshield;
- United Launch Alliance prepares for crucial certification flight as U.S. Space Force watches closely;
- NASA’s “Hidden Figures” honored in Congressional Gold Medal ceremony;
- The Aerospace Corporation pushes research on hard-to-spot spacecraft reentries;
- Space Force chief urges readiness for new era of competition;
- A partial lunar eclipse of the Harvest Moon supermoon is coming this week. Here’s everything you need to know;
- Space Force awards $45 million to universities for propulsion and power research;
- Navigating new frontiers: Assessing the opportunity for U.S. entities to launch and return space missions in Australia;
- Virgin Galactic plans to spend $30M on new hangar at Spaceport America;
Major Space Related Activities for the Week
- Lawmakers are still struggling to reach agreement on a budget continuing resolution that would prevent a government shutdown with the start of the 2025 federal fiscal year on October 1.
- In space, the 15-nation ISS is in the initial stages of its latest crew exchange, which began with the launch of Russia’s Soyuz MS-26 last week with NASA astronaut Don Pettit and cosmonauts Aleksey Ovchinin and Ivan Vagner for a six-month stay.
- The FAA’s Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee (COMSTAC) meets Monday with virtual public participation.
- A Congressional Gold Medal ceremony on Wednesday will honor four “hidden figures” from NASA’s earliest days.
- On Thursday at 12:00 p.m. EDT, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine will host a 90-minute Town Hall on the “Science Strategy for the Human Exploration of Mars” study it is conducting for NASA.
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