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52 articles
SpaceX has won a $4.16 billion Pentagon contract for satellites meant to track targets from orbit, pushing Golden Dome from political slogan toward early military architecture.
A lunar mass driver may look like future logistics infrastructure, but the same ability to accelerate mass creates a serious security question.
The FAA has declared Starship V3's debut flight a mishap, shifting SpaceX's largest rocket program from rapid testing back into a regulator-led investigation cycle.
Starcloud-1 matters not because it is large, but because it packs into a 60-kilogram satellite the idea that AI infrastructure can move into orbit.
Starlink has moved from wartime necessity into a geopolitical test of satellite-infrastructure control.
Europe’s 2 GHz mobile satellite spectrum proposal turns a technical renewal cycle into a strategic test for SpaceX, Viasat and European satellite autonomy.
If SpaceX really moves toward the public markets, Europe’s space sector will not just be watching someone else’s valuation; it will be testing its own investment story.
SpaceX has acknowledged in IPO-related risk factors that its orbital AI plan is constrained less by ambition than by access to chips.
Starcloud has ordered SpaceX optical terminals to use Starlink as a global data-relay network for its planned orbital data centers.
If the Starlink firmware clues are accurate, SpaceX is preparing a Mini dish that could finally work without an external power source.
Exolaunch and SEOPS are moving from launch-slot brokers to buyers of entire Falcon 9 flights, a clear signal that rideshare is no longer just about filling spare capacity.
Electrek’s latest critique is not only about Musk changing priorities, but about the increasingly visible energy bill behind artificial intelligence.
The first Starship V3 flight was not a finished-rocket victory lap; it was a sharper test boundary, putting SpaceX’s newest vehicle configuration into real flight.
The FBI's new procurement plan turns license plate cameras from a local investigative tool into a national vehicle-tracking infrastructure question.
SpaceX’s potential IPO is no longer only a rocket-company story; it now carries the safety record of the AI company that helped lift its private valuation.
SpaceX’s Starship V3 has been fully overhauled, pushing the rocket away from prototype territory and closer to a vehicle that could one day carry humans toward the Moon.
Varda Space Industries has signed a deal with United Therapeutics that could turn microgravity into a real production line for drugs.
STORIE is a small but important space-weather mission: it measures energetic neutral atoms to separate solar and terrestrial contributions to Earth's ring current.
Orbital debris is becoming a service business, not just a one-off demo mission.
Eycore-1 is a small orbital test, but its real weight lies in Poland’s attempt to obtain radar data from space through its own system rather than only buying someone else’s imagery.
The Pentagon announced classified-network AI agreements on May 1, 2026 without Anthropic.
Artemis 2’s 10-day lunar loop delivered 1.4 terabytes of engineering data, exceeding pre-mission projections by 22%.
NASA’s $500 million Mobile Launcher 2 project—designed for the now-canceled SLS Block 1B rocket—has been halted mid-construction, stranding a platform built for a future that no longer exists.
Space Pioneer's Tianlong-3 rocket failed to reach orbit due to an anomaly during its debut launch on June 15, 2024.
Four astronauts are on board the Artemis 2 spacecraft, which launched on April 1.
The European Commission’s 350GB data breach reveals a chasm between terrestrial cybersecurity and the unprotected flank of orbital science.
NASA’s Artemis Base Camp will house four astronauts for up to 60 days, doubling Apollo mission durations.
NASA’s new moon strategy hinges on outsourcing lunar infrastructure to private vendors—a gamble that could redefine space exploration forever.
NASA’s $20 billion plan for a lunar base isn’t just another headline-grabbing project—it’s a calculated bet on nuclear power as the linchpin of off-world survival.
When Artemis 2 lifts off on April 1, it won’t be carrying tourists on a scenic lunar detour.
Musk's $25B Terafab aims to produce billions of chips, bridging Earth's silicon gap.
SpaceX's Starship booster returns safely after 6th flight, validating catch-and-reuse trajectory.
SpaceX’s tenth Starship flight achieved what previous tests could not: a complete validation of its fully reusable architecture.
Elon Musk’s March 21 announcement at Austin’s defunct Seaholm Power Plant tied Terafab’s output directly to flight computer demands, a link absent from Tesla’s public roadmaps.
SpaceX has scheduled the launch of the Starlink 10-62 mission for 10:47 a.m. EDT from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
Mars’ 38% gravity risks wiping out 30% of astronaut muscle mass—a critical gap as NASA targets 2030 crewed missions.
The US Space Force’s satellite—designed to track adversarial orbital threats—now faces indefinite delay after ULA’s Vulcan rocket was grounded post-anomaly.
Canada’s $200M Nova Scotia spaceport—run by Maritime Launch—ends its 60-year reliance on US/EU launches, securing orbital sovereignty with Atlantic trajector...
Blue Origin’s 51,600-satellite Sunrise project aims to orbit an AI data center—turning space into a latency-optimized computing layer.
With Gravitas, K2 Space is trying to prove that orbital compute first has to answer a blunt question: whether there is enough power for serious work.
Startup Starcloud wants FCC to greenlight 88,000-satellite orbital data centers—more than tripling all tracked objects in orbit.
NASA’s Artemis 2 just passed its final flight review—April’s crewed Moon flyby is the first test of deep-space survival.
MeerKAT’s sharpest galactic-center radio image reveals why Milky Way’s black hole smothers starbirth—but some pockets still defy the cosmic killjoy.
SpaceX’s Stargaze service turns 5,000 Starlink satellites into an ad-hoc SSA network, offering near-continuous orbital tracking at a fraction of the cost of traditional systems.
Two Falcon 9 rockets, six previous flights between them, lofted 27 Starlink satellites each into precise orbital planes—all before sunset on March 1.
Falcon 9’s 218th flight deployed 29 Starlink satellites with a 98%+ success rate—a statistic that obscures its real significance: orbital infrastructure is now an assembly line.