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On Christmas Eve 1968 three Americans became the first humans to visit another world. What they did to celebrate was unexpected and profound, and will be remembered throughout all human history. Genesis: the Story of Apollo 8, Robert Zimmerman's classic history of humanity's first journey to another world, tells that story, and it is now available as both an ebook and an audiobook, both with a foreword by Valerie Anders and a new introduction by Robert Zimmerman.

 

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Momentus losing contracts due to security concerns

Capitalism in space: The orbit tug company Momentus appears to be losing some of its contracts because of security concerns that have delayed FAA approvals of its launch licenses and forced the cancellation of flights.

The company delayed the launch of its first Vigoride vehicle, which was to fly on a SpaceX rideshare mission in January, because it could not complete a payload review by the Federal Aviation Administration’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation in time. Momentus said that the FAA could not approve the payload “due to national security and foreign ownership concerns regarding Momentus raised by the DoD during an interagency review.”

Momentus now hopes to launch that first Vigoride mission on another Falcon 9 rideshare mission in June. The company said the FAA is still working on that interagency review that is being held open by the Defense Department. The review needs to be completed by the end of May for the company to keep its slot on that June launch.

The company has also lost a contract with Lockheed Martin, which though the reasons have not been stated probably relates to the same issue.

That issue apparently is the company’s former chief executive Mikhail Kokorich and its co-founder Lev Khasis and his wife. To address these concerns, Kokorich has stepped down, and the Khasis have put their shares in the company in a voting trust and will divest them within three years.

All does not appear lost however. Momentus Vigoride tug is presently the only option available for cubesats that need an upper stage to move them to different orbits, and it appears that neither Lockheed Martin nor its other customers are entirely abandoning it. They are simply playing safe, standing back, and waiting until the security issues are resolved and the FAA gives its approval.

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3 comments

  • Joe

    I hope they get this fixed. I have a satellite launching on the second Vigoride and I am not getting information on when it will fly. I hear June from my integrator but if they haven’t launched the first one, how can they say June for the second unless they are combining things (not a good look).

    Transparency in this industry is hard to come by. Every thinks they are protecting secrets but they really aren’t going about it with the right methodology. Just keep customers in the loop. It goes a long way.

  • Jeff Wright

    It’s a little late for this…after the Loral stunt

  • Edward

    Joe,
    You wrote “I have a satellite launching on the second Vigoride and I am not getting information on when it will fly. I hear June from my integrator but if they haven’t launched the first one, how can they say June for the second unless they are combining things (not a good look)

    Since they have lost contracts, it seems that room has opened up. You probably got your ride in June due to that opened opportunity. You are right, it does not look so good for the company, but hopefully they will get through this rocky start and will be able to serve a large number of customers in the future.

    Please let us know the results of your flight. As I recall, you are flying a 5 cm cubesat to test your idea for solar arrays. Good luck to you.

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