April 26, 2023 Quick space links
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay.
- Interesting Twitter discussion about the Hakuto-R1 lunar landing failure
The most interesting comment, based on inconclusive and confusing data, is this: “From the Doppler profile, it looks like it descended, landed, then something went badly wrong and it accelerated back off the surface – just speculation based on radio obs.”
- ULA CEO Tory Bruno publishes paper outlining his thoughts on maintaining U.S. space assets agains attack
Bruno’s approach is very thoughtful and clearly presented. He concludes that the best approach is the one with the most variety, with both low and high orbit constellations providing communications and data. Why am I not surprised?
- The spacewalk plan to shift two solar panels on China’s Tiangong-3 space station to better locations
This effort is reminiscent of similar things the Russians did on both its Salyut and Mir stations.
- Rocket Lab says its preparations for two launches in New Zealand of NASA’s TROPICS satellites are on schedule
The first is scheduled for May 1, 2023 (New Zealand time), with the second on May 16th.
- Russia official extends its partnership on ISS until at least 2028
No surprise. What this really tells us is that Russia’s own space station is continuing to fall behind schedule, and will not be ready for launch by 2027, as previously predicted.
- Russia touts strength of Chinese-Russian space partnership by citing visit by official to China
Yeah, right. And I have a bridge in Brooklyn I’d like to sell you. The Chinese will make nice noises, but they know that they can expect nothing from Russia. If something shows up, great, but it would be dangerous to depend on it.
- For the first time since 2021, Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo (VSS Unity) completes a glide test flight
Their next goal is a powered flight with six crewmembers, targeting the second quarter of this year.
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay.
- Interesting Twitter discussion about the Hakuto-R1 lunar landing failure
The most interesting comment, based on inconclusive and confusing data, is this: “From the Doppler profile, it looks like it descended, landed, then something went badly wrong and it accelerated back off the surface – just speculation based on radio obs.”
- ULA CEO Tory Bruno publishes paper outlining his thoughts on maintaining U.S. space assets agains attack
Bruno’s approach is very thoughtful and clearly presented. He concludes that the best approach is the one with the most variety, with both low and high orbit constellations providing communications and data. Why am I not surprised?
- The spacewalk plan to shift two solar panels on China’s Tiangong-3 space station to better locations
This effort is reminiscent of similar things the Russians did on both its Salyut and Mir stations.
- Rocket Lab says its preparations for two launches in New Zealand of NASA’s TROPICS satellites are on schedule
The first is scheduled for May 1, 2023 (New Zealand time), with the second on May 16th.
- Russia official extends its partnership on ISS until at least 2028
No surprise. What this really tells us is that Russia’s own space station is continuing to fall behind schedule, and will not be ready for launch by 2027, as previously predicted.
- Russia touts strength of Chinese-Russian space partnership by citing visit by official to China
Yeah, right. And I have a bridge in Brooklyn I’d like to sell you. The Chinese will make nice noises, but they know that they can expect nothing from Russia. If something shows up, great, but it would be dangerous to depend on it.
- For the first time since 2021, Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo (VSS Unity) completes a glide test flight
Their next goal is a powered flight with six crewmembers, targeting the second quarter of this year.