November 4, 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.
- We Could Use Neutrino Detectors As Giant Particle Colliders
Sounds cool but the scientists also admit the present neutrino detectors can’t do anything better than the existing colliders, and in fact in most cases can’s do as much.
- Chinese pseudo-company Galactic Energy touts a successful static fire test of the first stage of its Pallas-1 rocket
This rocket was first unveiled in 2023, and then did not appear reusable. The images now confirm this, showing no landing legs. The company however has implied that it will eventually land vertically for reuse.
- Lawmakers warn UK must act now to get space ambitions back on track
The report, by the House of Lords, is a joke. It says nothing about reducing regulation and red tape, which is the UK’s main problem. Instead, it proposes more funding and more government bureaucracy “to coordinate policy and industry engagement.” We should expect even less (lower than zero?) from the United Kingdom in the coming years.
- The reason Starlink became available in the Falklands was because of the advocacy of Chris Gare of OpenFalklands
Giving credit where credit is due.
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.
- We Could Use Neutrino Detectors As Giant Particle Colliders
Sounds cool but the scientists also admit the present neutrino detectors can’t do anything better than the existing colliders, and in fact in most cases can’s do as much.
- Chinese pseudo-company Galactic Energy touts a successful static fire test of the first stage of its Pallas-1 rocket
This rocket was first unveiled in 2023, and then did not appear reusable. The images now confirm this, showing no landing legs. The company however has implied that it will eventually land vertically for reuse.
- Lawmakers warn UK must act now to get space ambitions back on track
The report, by the House of Lords, is a joke. It says nothing about reducing regulation and red tape, which is the UK’s main problem. Instead, it proposes more funding and more government bureaucracy “to coordinate policy and industry engagement.” We should expect even less (lower than zero?) from the United Kingdom in the coming years.
- The reason Starlink became available in the Falklands was because of the advocacy of Chris Gare of OpenFalklands
Giving credit where credit is due.















