Recommended Posts

ISS astronauts & cosmonauts had to take shelter in Crew Dragon and Soyuz, serving as lifeboats in case of an ISS impact. 

 

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/us-condemns-dangerous-russian-anti-satellite-test/story?id=81181090

 

Quote

 

US condemns Russian anti-satellite test it says created 'dangerous' debris field

 

The State Department criticized the Russian test as another example of what it said was Russia's "dangerous and irresponsible behavior" in its space military operations.
>
The new test involved the destruction of an orbiting satellite by a ground-based missile similar to a Russian test in April and December of last year. In July 2020, the U.S. strongly criticized another Russian anti-satellite test that involved a different anti-satellite technology when a "killer satellite" deployed a projectile in the direction of another satellite.

 

Earlier on Monday, U.S. Space Command confirmed that it was "aware of a debris-generating event in outer space" and that it was "actively working to characterize the debris field and will continue to ensure all space-faring nations have the information necessary to maneuver satellites if impacted."

 

 

  • 4 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 4 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...

NASA orders 12 more Commercial Cargo 2 (CRS-2) missions through 2026, 6 each for SpaceX and Northrop Grumman.

 

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nasa-orders-additional-cargo-flights-to-space-station

 

Quote

>

With this action, a total of 32 missions have been ordered by the agency for cargo resupply missions under the CRS-2 contracts with 14 missions to Northrop Grumman, three missions to Sierra Nevada Corporation (now Sierra Space), and 15 missions to SpaceX.

For information about NASA’s commercial resupply of the space station, visit:

https://www.nasa.gov/commercialresupply

 

The 3 Sierra Space missions are for the Dream Chaser spaceplane. 

 

411849977_SNCDreamChaserlandingtest-1280.thumb.jpg.ad4e221eb8056120f7ebe95a7c4f76dc.jpg

  • 3 months later...
On 15/07/2022 at 22:27, DocM said:

Rocosmos (Russian space agency) chief Dimitri Rogozin fired

 

 

 

He certainly wasn't nice. But I think that especially in recent times, his statements were out of necessity rather than out of true conviction. But he obviously didn't manage to deceive his master for long.

On 16/07/2022 at 05:31, SteveL said:

He certainly wasn't nice. But I think that especially in recent times, his statements were out of necessity rather than out of true conviction. But he obviously didn't manage to deceive his master for long.

 

This appears to be a promotion for Rogozin; Russian sources say he's being assigned  administrative duties in eastern Ukraine.

  • 2 weeks later...

DoD is looking to host tactical  intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) payloads on mega-constellation satellites. So far they're talking to SpaceX (Starlink), Amazon (Kuiper), and Terran  Orbital.

 

https://breakingdefense.com/2022/07/space-force-considers-asking-satellite-firms-to-host-payloads-for-tactical-isr/

 

  • 2 months later...

Not sure if this is the place for this but... About 3 weeks ago I had the opportunity to go kayaking at midnight, a couple of miles from the illuminated Artemis, within the bioluminescent waters around Dummit Cove - surrounded by dolphins, manatees and gators.  Was breathtaking to see it like that!

On 09/10/2022 at 11:14, Dick Montage said:

Not sure if this is the place for this but... About 3 weeks ago I had the opportunity to go kayaking at midnight, a couple of miles from the illuminated Artemis, within the bioluminescent waters around Dummit Cove - surrounded by dolphins, manatees and gators.  Was breathtaking to see it like that!

 

Years ago we did a night boat trip when the Shuttle was on LC-39A, brightly lit. Too cool.

 

Even more spectacular may be when that monster Starship stack is on the new pad at LC-39A-2, waiting for launch under similar circumstances. The Starship tower is 469 feet tall (143m) the Starship 394 feet (120m)

 

This is a crop from a NASA image, showing the new Starship launch tower and LC-39A-1 with Crew 5 for comparison 

 

491807044_LC-39AtowersOct2022.thumb.jpg.0c6dd555824783f688756fdb6dd95ce8.jpg

Edited by DocM
  • 1 month later...

One Cargo Dragon going to the Chicago Museum of Science &  Industry

http://www.collectspace.com/news/news-120122a-spacex-dragon-chicago-museum-science-industry.html

Quote

December 1, 2022 — A SpaceX Dragon spacecraft that twice splashed down has now landed for its last time — in Chicago.

The capsule, which flew two uncrewed missions to deliver cargo to and from the International Space Station, arrived at the Museum of Science and Industry (MSI) in Illinois on Thursday (Dec. 1) for its permanent exhibit. The Dragon will join other historic spacecraft in the museum's Henry Crown Space Center when it debuts on public display in the spring of 2023.
>

 

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...

Chinese "Starship" 

JZYJ Longyun-70

Subscale, but similar principles.

https://spacenews.com/chinese-startups-conduct-hot-fire-tests-for-mini-version-of-spacexs-starship/

Quote

 

Chinese startups conduct hot fire tests for mini version of SpaceX’s Starship

HELSINKI — A Chinese launch startup has performed hot fire tests as part of development of a planned reusable stainless-steel rocket apparently inspired by SpaceX’s Starship.

Space Epoch recently performed a series of tests of a 4.2-meter-diameter stainless steel propellant tank combined with a Longyun-70 methane-liquid oxygen engine developed by engine maker Jiuzhou Yunjian. The tests took place at Jiuzhou Yunjian’s test site in Anhui Province.

The tests are part of Beijing-based Space Epoch earlier revealed plans to develop a 64-meter-tall stainless steel launcher capable of lifting 6.5 tons to a 1,100-kilometer-altitude sun-synchronous orbit. The launcher will be able to be reused up to 20 times.

>

 

 

  • 5 months later...
  • 1 month later...
  • 7 months later...

Neat YouTube channel ... the team behind engineering videos has started to release some of their footage...

https://www.youtube.com/@skyshowtv

Artemis 1

 

Virgin Galatic

 

 

Starship's 2nd launch

 

 

 

 

  • 1 month later...

NASA and ISRO are planning to have an Indian astronaut fly to ISS...perhaps on Axiom Ax-4

https://spacenews.com/nasa-and-isro-continue-discussions-about-indian-astronaut-flight-to-iss/

India's statement also mentioned their Gaganyaan spacecraft flying cargo and crew to ISS. It should fly its first crew mission no earlier than 2025.

 

20240526_195833.thumb.jpg.9039a13e0eb02ba0f8e79165e231be18.jpg

 

  • 4 weeks later...

US and India advance human spaceflight cooperation

(among other things)

A "Strategic Framework for Human Spaceflight Cooperation”

https://spacenews.com/u-s-and-india-advance-human-spaceflight-cooperation/

• Astronaut training at Johnson Space Center, Houston Texas

• Indian astronaut to ISS (likely the Axiom 4 mission in August)

• participation in the Artemis Lunar Gateway station

• space defense cooperation at the Advanced Domains Defense Dialogue last month

• 2 Indian companies, 114ai and 3rdiTech, have partnered with the US Space Force on space situational awareness

Unstated, probably some advice getting their Gaganyaan human spacecraft ready to carry a crew into orbit. Hopefully, within the next 2-3 years.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Posts

    • Flying as the central point eh... As a massive Spyro fan who has replayed the Reignited Trilogy three times and the originals 4 times... I have some doubts, but maybe...
    • Apple is expanding Private Cloud Compute beyond its own data centers by Pradeep Viswanathan At WWDC 2026, as part of the improved Apple Intelligence capabilities, Apple today announced that it is expanding Private Cloud Compute (PCC), its privacy-focused cloud infrastructure for Apple Intelligence, beyond its own data centers for the first time. Private Cloud Compute was designed to handle Apple Intelligence requests that are too complex to run fully on-device. The PCC system does not store user data and does not allow Apple or anyone else to access user requests. Last year, Apple also expanded its Security Bounty program with rewards of up to $1 million for researchers who could find serious vulnerabilities in PCC. Until now, Apple's PCC data centers were using Apple's own silicon. As part of the expansion, Apple is working with Google and NVIDIA to run new Apple Intelligence workloads on Google Cloud systems powered by NVIDIA GPUs. Apple will be using this new infrastructure to execute more demanding AI tasks while maintaining the same privacy and security guarantees of PCC. The new implementation uses NVIDIA Confidential Computing with NVIDIA GPUs, Intel CPUs with TDX, and Google’s Titan chip. Apple says it has worked with Google to build additional protections beyond a traditional confidential computing deployment. Despite the expansion to third-party data centers, Apple claims that its core PCC requirements remain unchanged, including stateless computation, no privileged runtime access, non-targetability, and verifiable transparency. The company highlighted that it will continue to control the PCC software stack, and Apple devices will only trust PCC software that has been cryptographically approved by Apple. To take security to the next level, Apple mentioned that it is maintaining an append-only ledger of Google Cloud hardware that is part of the PCC fleet. The company claims this will help reduce the risk of supply chain attacks. In addition to AI infrastructure, Apple also worked with Google to use technologies behind the Gemini family of models to build the next generation of Apple Foundation Models to power Apple Intelligence features across on-device and cloud workloads. As expected, for more demanding AI tasks like agentic tool use and complex reasoning, Apple will rely on the expanded PCC infrastructure running on Google Cloud. The expansion of PCC on Google Cloud will gradually ramp toward the full set of protections during the summer preview period. As before, Apple will also publish binaries for public inspection, provide research tooling, and give researchers access to live PCC nodes in research mode through the Apple Security Bounty Program.
    • my problem with outlook (new) is that it connects only to outlook.com. all connections to external providers goes through there. Got your mail server and want to use imap directly? no way... it adds a connector on outlook.com. last bug; if your email on an external provider if the same as principal email of your microsoft account, it doesn't work...
    • It's the only reason I finally have an iPhone (for work) and enjoy using it so much that I'm tempted to move from android next time I need to replace my own device
    • So is Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, just to mention a few. What's your point? Everyone is a threat from their enemies' perspective. I'd say that Israel is only a threat to their immediate enemies like Hamas, Hezbollah and the Iranian regime, not to anyone else.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      506
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      222
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      92
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      86
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      81
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!