June 16, 2026 Quick space links
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay. This post is also an open thread. I welcome my readers to post any comments or additional links relating to any space issues, even if unrelated to the links below.
- State Dept. and SpaceX sign agreement to use Starlink for international disaster preparedness & U.S. humanitarian response efforts worldwide
Actually a no-brainer. I am sure it is not exclusive, and when Amazon’s Leo is operational it will get a similar deal.
- Asteoroid mining startup AstroForge touts the assembly of its second asteroid spacecraft
Dubbed Deep Space-2, it will attempt to rendezvous with an asteroid. The company’s first asteroid probe, Odin, failed shortly after launch in 2025.
- Upper stage of China’s Zhuque-2E rocket launched June 9th breaks apart
The pieces pose only a temporary problem as they are low enough they will all burn up in a few months. The break-up however highlights China’s irresponsibility in this matter, as this is not the only Chinese upper stage to do this. Its Long March 6 did so four times in 2024. Moreover, China makes relatively little effort to bring these upper stages down quickly in a controlled manner.
- Blue Origin touts the proposed ability of its Blue Ring orbital tug to deflect dangerous asteroids
Hasn’t launched yet, so this is just empty PR.
- Astrobotic (now owned by space station startup Voyager) touts the unveiling of its now complete Griffin-1 lunar lander
The spacecraft still awaits final thermal, vibration, and environmental ground testing. It is scheduled to launch late this year on a Falcon Heavy.
- On June 16, 2012 Boeing’s X-37B landed, completing its second mission
It spent 468 days and 14 hours in space.
- On June 16, 2012 China launched Shenzhou-9 on the second mission to itsTiangong-1 space station
It included China’s first female astronaut, Liu Yang.










