February 18, 2025 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.
- Mysterious X-ray flash detected in Chandra X-Ray Observatory archives
The flash occurred in 2020 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, with its source unknown.
- By today NASA’s workforce will shrink by 10%
The layoffs are as per Trump’s order to lay off all new provisional employees, plus the 750 or so who accepted the buy offer. The article is another example of the media wailing over a staffing reduction that private companies do all the time, usually to the benefit of the company.
- Interview with Yao Song, co-founder and CEO of pseudo-company Orienspace
I haven’t watched it, because it is almost 40 minutes long. Jay’s comment is entertaining, “The co-Host mentions Mao more than Yao!” The pseudo-company itself has completed one launch.
- Space News article touting the wonders of China’s pseudo-commercial sector in Beijing
Is it any wonder this industry is booming in the nation’s capital, where all the power resides that also dictates everything these so-called private companies do? The article claims that by ’28 the many pseudo-companies based in Beijing will be doing 100 launches per year. We shall see.
- The next Progress to bring cargo to ISS is now being prepped for launch
Launch is scheduled for February 27, 2025.
- ISRO touts the first completed upper stage that will place its manned Gaganyaan spacecraft into orbit
The stage will be used on India’s HLVM3 rocket (Heavy Lift Vehicle Mark 3), its planned most powerful rocket, presently being developed.
- South Africa rejects Starlink
Actually, Starlink had already rejected South Africa, partly because of its racist policies confiscating land from whites, and partly because the government there was demanding an exorbitant share of Starlink’s profits.
- On this day in 1977 the shuttle engineering test vehicle Enterprise made its first “captive-inactive” flight atop a Boeing 747
Enterprise never flew in space. Instead, it was used to test various shuttle technologies as the fleet was designed and built.
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.
- Mysterious X-ray flash detected in Chandra X-Ray Observatory archives
The flash occurred in 2020 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, with its source unknown.
- By today NASA’s workforce will shrink by 10%
The layoffs are as per Trump’s order to lay off all new provisional employees, plus the 750 or so who accepted the buy offer. The article is another example of the media wailing over a staffing reduction that private companies do all the time, usually to the benefit of the company.
- Interview with Yao Song, co-founder and CEO of pseudo-company Orienspace
I haven’t watched it, because it is almost 40 minutes long. Jay’s comment is entertaining, “The co-Host mentions Mao more than Yao!” The pseudo-company itself has completed one launch.
- Space News article touting the wonders of China’s pseudo-commercial sector in Beijing
Is it any wonder this industry is booming in the nation’s capital, where all the power resides that also dictates everything these so-called private companies do? The article claims that by ’28 the many pseudo-companies based in Beijing will be doing 100 launches per year. We shall see.
- The next Progress to bring cargo to ISS is now being prepped for launch
Launch is scheduled for February 27, 2025.
- ISRO touts the first completed upper stage that will place its manned Gaganyaan spacecraft into orbit
The stage will be used on India’s HLVM3 rocket (Heavy Lift Vehicle Mark 3), its planned most powerful rocket, presently being developed.
- South Africa rejects Starlink
Actually, Starlink had already rejected South Africa, partly because of its racist policies confiscating land from whites, and partly because the government there was demanding an exorbitant share of Starlink’s profits.
- On this day in 1977 the shuttle engineering test vehicle Enterprise made its first “captive-inactive” flight atop a Boeing 747
Enterprise never flew in space. Instead, it was used to test various shuttle technologies as the fleet was designed and built.









