March 3, 2023 Quick space links
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay.
- Video of lunar impact seen from Hiratsuka Observatory in Japan
They estimate the new crater to be about 65 feet wide.
- Russians Sergey Prokopiev and Dmitry Petelin will today move their seat harnesses into the new Soyuz capsule, while American Frank Rubio will do it on March 6th
I’m not sure why this wasn’t done immediately, by all three, immediately after the arrival of the Soyuz capsule on February 25, 2023. If there had been a major issue the three men would have either had to scramble to make the new Soyuz usable as a lifeboat, or would have been forced to use the improvised lifeboat arrangement in the Dragon Endurance capsule and the leaking Soyuz capsule, despite having a good vessel available.
- A graph showing the steady and slow decay of Hubble’s orbit
The decay was brought up because Hubble now orbits just below SpaceX’s Starlink satellites, and thus some are concerned its work will be hindered by them. I think this is a non-issue. More important is that decay. If Hubble is going to be remain in space, work on a rescue mission must begin soon.
- Chinese satellite inspecting American military satellites in geosynchronous orbit
China has launched a number of these classified inspection satellites, designed to surveil other satellites. As long as they do no harm to others, the satellites are doing nothing wrong, or different than what Russia and the U.S. do.
- Chinese pseudo-company Sepoch now plans first test launch of its stainless steel rocket in 2025
As Jay notes, “Wow stainless steel! Who would of thought of that?”
- Astra identifies the cause of its last launch failure
In reading their conclusions, I came away with the impression that this rocket had a lot of weak links, any one of which could cause a failure. No wonder the company abandoned it after this launch to focus on a new rocket.
Courtesy of BtB’s stringer Jay.
- Video of lunar impact seen from Hiratsuka Observatory in Japan
They estimate the new crater to be about 65 feet wide.
- Russians Sergey Prokopiev and Dmitry Petelin will today move their seat harnesses into the new Soyuz capsule, while American Frank Rubio will do it on March 6th
I’m not sure why this wasn’t done immediately, by all three, immediately after the arrival of the Soyuz capsule on February 25, 2023. If there had been a major issue the three men would have either had to scramble to make the new Soyuz usable as a lifeboat, or would have been forced to use the improvised lifeboat arrangement in the Dragon Endurance capsule and the leaking Soyuz capsule, despite having a good vessel available.
- A graph showing the steady and slow decay of Hubble’s orbit
The decay was brought up because Hubble now orbits just below SpaceX’s Starlink satellites, and thus some are concerned its work will be hindered by them. I think this is a non-issue. More important is that decay. If Hubble is going to be remain in space, work on a rescue mission must begin soon.
- Chinese satellite inspecting American military satellites in geosynchronous orbit
China has launched a number of these classified inspection satellites, designed to surveil other satellites. As long as they do no harm to others, the satellites are doing nothing wrong, or different than what Russia and the U.S. do.
- Chinese pseudo-company Sepoch now plans first test launch of its stainless steel rocket in 2025
As Jay notes, “Wow stainless steel! Who would of thought of that?”
- Astra identifies the cause of its last launch failure
In reading their conclusions, I came away with the impression that this rocket had a lot of weak links, any one of which could cause a failure. No wonder the company abandoned it after this launch to focus on a new rocket.












