June 20, 2023 Quick space links
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay.
- An analysis of the landing failure of Hakuto-R1
This is thirty minute presentation, which concludes that though there was a failure of the software, in the end the failure was due to management errors, including changing the landing site without doing sufficient simulations.
- Boeing CEO says company still committed to Starliner
Sounds good, eh? Don’t bet on it. The company is almost a billion dollars in the hole due to the extra costs incurred because the project’s failure, with no sign yet of any income in the near future.
- Delta-4 Heavy launch scheduled for tonight, at 3:29 am Eastern
This will be the first Delta-4 Heavy launch in almost three years. More significant, it will be ULA’s first launch in 2023, a number that is even lower that its low launch numbers of recent years. At this pace it will be a challenge for ULA to match its lowest launch counts of five, from ’19 and ’21. UPDATE: Scrubbed, reschedule 24 hours later.
- Anonymous source says Blue Origin will now require in-office work, five days per week
The source’s whining about this is amusing, but it also suggests once again the culture and management at Blue Origin is not the best.
- China claims it has a large alliance of space-faring nations who have agreed to partner on its lunar base
Except for Russia and the UAE, all are small time third world nations with no space infrastructure. Many have also not made a commitment, simply opened discussions. Russia will contribute little, and the UAE has a conflict as it also wants to participate in Artemis. U.S. law makes participating in both very very difficult, if not impossible.
- China’s state-run press deletes comments from professor claiming NASA had agreed to use China’s Queqiao lunar relay communications satellite
Either the professor was misinformed, or he revealed illegal negotiations by Biden’s NASA that NASA didn’t want revealed. If the latter, there was probably a frantic call made to China by the White House, begging them to censor this information, and China gladly obliged.
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay.
- An analysis of the landing failure of Hakuto-R1
This is thirty minute presentation, which concludes that though there was a failure of the software, in the end the failure was due to management errors, including changing the landing site without doing sufficient simulations.
- Boeing CEO says company still committed to Starliner
Sounds good, eh? Don’t bet on it. The company is almost a billion dollars in the hole due to the extra costs incurred because the project’s failure, with no sign yet of any income in the near future.
- Delta-4 Heavy launch scheduled for tonight, at 3:29 am Eastern
This will be the first Delta-4 Heavy launch in almost three years. More significant, it will be ULA’s first launch in 2023, a number that is even lower that its low launch numbers of recent years. At this pace it will be a challenge for ULA to match its lowest launch counts of five, from ’19 and ’21. UPDATE: Scrubbed, reschedule 24 hours later.
- Anonymous source says Blue Origin will now require in-office work, five days per week
The source’s whining about this is amusing, but it also suggests once again the culture and management at Blue Origin is not the best.
- China claims it has a large alliance of space-faring nations who have agreed to partner on its lunar base
Except for Russia and the UAE, all are small time third world nations with no space infrastructure. Many have also not made a commitment, simply opened discussions. Russia will contribute little, and the UAE has a conflict as it also wants to participate in Artemis. U.S. law makes participating in both very very difficult, if not impossible.
- China’s state-run press deletes comments from professor claiming NASA had agreed to use China’s Queqiao lunar relay communications satellite
Either the professor was misinformed, or he revealed illegal negotiations by Biden’s NASA that NASA didn’t want revealed. If the latter, there was probably a frantic call made to China by the White House, begging them to censor this information, and China gladly obliged.