October 7, 2024 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.
Having visited an eye doctor today and had my eyes dilated, posting this afternoon is difficult. Sorry thus for the lack of additional posts.
- Dawn Aerospace flies world’s only rapidly reusable rocket-powered aircraft twice in one day
This remains a small scale engineering prototype focused on testing the engineering.
- Brightness of first Chinese broadband constellation satellites alarms astronomers
My heart bleeds. All this paper really proves is that any effort to squelch the American satellite constellations will accomplish nothing but squelching the American satellite industry. It will do nothing to save ground-based astronomy. Astronomers should stop whining and focus on building telescopes in space.
- Debris from break-up of Long March 6A upper stage has spread to many altitudes
There is no indication China cares one iota. It certainly does not appear they have taken any action to fix the problems with the Long March 6A upper stage, which has broken up at least twice.
- ViaSat-3 F1 satellite enters commercial service
It is designed to provide internet access to airline customers over North America, including Hawaii. Whether its addition can stave off the competition from SpaceX’s Starlink remains questionable.
- Rocket Lab wins contract from NASA to study ways to bring the Perseverance’s core samples back to Earth
Few details were released, but it appears the company with this study contrct has the inside post on getting the full contract to do this, replacing the complex NASA/ESA/Lockheed Martin proposal that is overbudget, behind schedule, and incoherent in design.
- How Did The Vulcan Rocket Survive This Booster Failure?
Manley’s analysis is good, but he gets it very wrong when he says the FAA will likely ground Vulcan pending completion of its investigation. The FAA quickly announced no investigation was necessary, nor was Vulcan grounded.
- UAE announces a ‘Supreme Space Council’ that will oversee the country’s space activities
It appears a lot of people with power in the UAE want a seat at the table, running the UAE space program. This council gives them this, and illustrates how this is definitely a top-down program with little independent outside competition by non-government entities.
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.
Having visited an eye doctor today and had my eyes dilated, posting this afternoon is difficult. Sorry thus for the lack of additional posts.
- Dawn Aerospace flies world’s only rapidly reusable rocket-powered aircraft twice in one day
This remains a small scale engineering prototype focused on testing the engineering.
- Brightness of first Chinese broadband constellation satellites alarms astronomers
My heart bleeds. All this paper really proves is that any effort to squelch the American satellite constellations will accomplish nothing but squelching the American satellite industry. It will do nothing to save ground-based astronomy. Astronomers should stop whining and focus on building telescopes in space.
- Debris from break-up of Long March 6A upper stage has spread to many altitudes
There is no indication China cares one iota. It certainly does not appear they have taken any action to fix the problems with the Long March 6A upper stage, which has broken up at least twice.
- ViaSat-3 F1 satellite enters commercial service
It is designed to provide internet access to airline customers over North America, including Hawaii. Whether its addition can stave off the competition from SpaceX’s Starlink remains questionable.
- Rocket Lab wins contract from NASA to study ways to bring the Perseverance’s core samples back to Earth
Few details were released, but it appears the company with this study contrct has the inside post on getting the full contract to do this, replacing the complex NASA/ESA/Lockheed Martin proposal that is overbudget, behind schedule, and incoherent in design.
- How Did The Vulcan Rocket Survive This Booster Failure?
Manley’s analysis is good, but he gets it very wrong when he says the FAA will likely ground Vulcan pending completion of its investigation. The FAA quickly announced no investigation was necessary, nor was Vulcan grounded.
- UAE announces a ‘Supreme Space Council’ that will oversee the country’s space activities
It appears a lot of people with power in the UAE want a seat at the table, running the UAE space program. This council gives them this, and illustrates how this is definitely a top-down program with little independent outside competition by non-government entities.












