AST SpaceMobile adds public company expertise to leadership team
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 14:58
TAMPA, Fla. — AST SpaceMobile, which became a public company in April to develop a cellphone-compatible satellite broadband constellation, is expanding its leadership team.
The Texas-based company appointed Brian Heller as executive vice president, general counsel and secretary, and Scott Wisniewski as executive vice president and chief strategy officer.
Wine that went to space for sale with $1 million price tag
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 13:37
The wine is out of this world. The price is appropriately stratospheric.
Christie's said Tuesday it is selling a bottle of French wine that spent more than a year in orbit aboard the International Space Station.
Firefly Aerospace raises $75 million Series A round
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 12:51
WASHINGTON — Firefly Aerospace, nearing the first launch of its Alpha rocket, announced May 4 it raised $75 million in a Series A round that values the company at more than $1 billion.
The company said the Series A round was led by DADA Holdings, with participating from Astera Institute, Canon Ball LLC, Reuben Brothers Limited, SMS Capital Investment LLC, Raven One Ventures, The XBTO Ventures and other investors.
Parker discovers natural radio emission in Venus' atmosphere
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 10:20
During a brief swing by Venus, NASA's Parker Solar Probe detected a natural radio signal that revealed the spacecraft had flown through the planet's upper atmosphere. This was the first direct measurement of the Venusian atmosphere in nearly 30 years—and it looks quite different from Venus past. A study published today confirms that Venus' upper atmosphere undergoes puzzling changes over a solar cycle, the Sun's 11-year activity cycle. This marks the latest clue to untangling how and why Venus and Earth are so different.
Born of similar processes, Earth and Venus are twins: both rocky, and of similar size and structure.
EU space regulation ready to take off with the creation of the EUSPA
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 10:20
Advanced weapons able to 'destroy US satellites' warns Space Chief
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 10:20
NanoAvionics adds satellite twin to Aurora Insight global wireless spectrum mission
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 10:20
Northrop Grumman Solar Arrays to Power Airbus OneSat Spacecraft
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 10:20
US Aerospace Company Blue Origin to Begin Selling Tickets for Tourist Trips in Space
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 10:20
Oxygen production from three-body photodissociation of water using light
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 10:20
A giant piece of space junk is hurtling towards Earth. Here's how worried you should be
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 10:16
A large piece of space debris, possibly weighing several tonnes, is currently on an uncontrolled reentry phase (that's space speak for "out of control"), and parts of it are expected to crash down to Earth over the next few weeks.
If that isn't worrying enough, it is impossible to predict exactly where the pieces that don't burn up in the atmosphere might land. Given the object's orbit, the possible landing points are anywhere in a band of latitudes "a little farther north than New York, Madrid and Beijing and as far south as southern Chile and Wellington, New Zealand".
The debris is part of the Long March 5B rocket that recently successfully launched China's first module for its proposed space station. The incident comes roughly a year after another similar Chinese rocket fell to Earth, landing in the Atlantic Ocean but not before it reportedly left a trail of debris in the African nation of Cote D'Ivoire.
Nelson sworn in as NASA administrator
Tuesday, 04 May 2021 01:53
WASHINGTON — Former senator Bill Nelson formally became NASA’s 14th administrator in a short ceremony May 3.
Vice President Kamala Harris gave the oath of office to Nelson at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington. Only a handful of guests and a media pool were in attendance, and the swearing-in ceremony was not broadcast live on NASA TV.
Renewed climate change fight bodes well for Earth observation sectors
Monday, 03 May 2021 21:15
TAMPA, Fla. — Companies that build or operate Earth observation satellites foresee busier days ahead as governments, and businesses, step up climate change initiatives.
Geospatial monitoring is key for tracking, understanding and ultimately cutting greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to what is increasingly seen as an environmental emergency.
Bill Nelson, head of NASA, hails 'new day in space'
Monday, 03 May 2021 20:12
Former Florida senator Bill Nelson was sworn in Monday as head of NASA, hailing a "new day" for space exploration as the United States seeks to return to the Moon.
With his hand on a Bible, Nelson took the oath of office from Vice President Kamala Harris as he officially took up the role of NASA administrator.
"It's a new day in space," he said, after bringing a Moon rock to the event.
Nelson, 78, who traveled into space in 1986, takes over the agency with the United States hoping to put astronauts back on the Moon by 2024.
Humans last set foot on the Moon in 1972 during the Apollo program.
Under the Artemis program, NASA wants to establish a sustainable presence, complete with a lunar space station, to test new technologies that would pave the way for a crewed mission to Mars.
Rocket engine startup sees opportunities in crowded launch market
Monday, 03 May 2021 19:18
WASHINGTON — The small launch sector is crowded, and getting more so. But Will Roper believes there is still room in the market for suppliers of rocket engines that innovate fast and adapt to changing demands.