Photos of X-37B After Landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base
Photos of the X-37B after landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base.
Photos of the X-37B after landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base.
It’s official: The launch of Discovery is delayed until February.
SpaceX is putting together its own plans to provide NASA a heavy-lift rocket. Key quote:
Fast-track development, multi-use and low cost are key, says [SpaceX owner Elon] Musk. βThe development timeframe is on the order of five years and would come to fruition before Obamaβs likely second term ends. It has got to fit within a NASA budget that fits in 2008 levels, and itβs got to have operational costs when functioning that is as close to zero as you can make it. That latter point demands that whatever components are in use for super-heavy lift must be in use for launching other satellites for say, geostationary commercial and government customers. If not, then the likelihood of success in my opinion is zero.β
A Croatian space mission to the Moon?
Bad news for the space shuttle: The root cause of the cracks on Discovery’s external tank is still not identified.
After more than seven months in orbit, the unmanned X-37B space plan has successfully returned to Earth. Key quote:
“Boeing and the Air Force are building another X-37B vehicle scheduled for launch in the spring of 2011.”
Update: Since several different reports are listing slightly different totals for the number of days in orbit, I’ve edited my note above to be less precise. I could add up the days myself, but that involves more math than I prefer to do!
Sierra Nevada, one of the new aerospace companies competing for NASA’s commercial crew money, appears to be the frontrunner to use the two X-34 suborbital rockets recently taken out of storage.
The telescope in an airplane flew its first observation mission today.
Is this finally going to happen? Richard Branson says Virgin Galactic could be flying tourists within a year.
It’s now official: the second test launch of the Falcon 9, with the Dragon capsule, is set for December 7, with a static test firing of the rocket’s engines on December 3.
The military reports that the X-37B’s mission is complete and it will be returning to Earth as early as Friday.