Friday, January 17, 2025

Trump 2.0 Webinar Replay 🇺🇸

And the Space Minds podcast launching soon
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Links: SpaceNews.com/space-minds-podcast, SpaceNews.com/webinars and SpaceNews.com/video.

 Space Minds Podcast Teaser #2

Space Minds: Peter Beck - What is Rocket Lab?

Get another sneak peak at the new Space Minds Podcast from SpaceNews with this clip from our first guest, Peter Beck, founder and CEO of Rocket Lab.


Learn more about the podcast, sponsorships, and get updates on the launch date:

https://spacenews.com/space-minds-podcast/


Webinar Replay

Trump 2.0 – How Will the Space Sector Change?

Replay: Trump 2.0 – How Will the Space Sector Change?

We had over 800 people tune into our live webinar but if you couldn't join us for the scintillating conversation fear not, the replay is now available.


Watch the Replay

Commercial Space Transformers

Martijn Blanken, Neo Space Group


In this episode of Commercial Space Transformers SpaceNews Senior Staff Writer Jason Rainbow speaks with Martijn Blanken, CEO, Neo Space Group (NSG).


In the conversation, Blanken discussed the company's recent acquisitions and the role of sovereign wealth funds like Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) in shaping the global commercial space industry. NSG was created last year by Saudi Arabia's PIF.


Watch the Episode [Web or YouTube]

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New Glenn Launches; Doesn't Quite Land - SpaceNews This Week

Top Stories of the Week From SpaceNews
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01/17/2025

Welcome to our roundup of top SpaceNews stories, delivered every Friday! This week, New Glenn reached orbit on its maiden launch, SpaceX lost its Starship upper stage during a test launch, China's lunar far side rover Yutu-2 is likely immobile, and more.

Our Top Story

New Glenn reaches orbit on first launch


New Glenn launch

By Jeff Foust, Jan. 16, 2025

Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket achieved orbit on its long-awaited first launch Jan. 16, although the company failed in its attempt to recover the first stage.


New Glenn lifted off at 2:03 a.m. Eastern from Launch Complex 36 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. The massive rocket, powered by seven BE-4 engines in its first stage, slowly ascended.


Stage separation took place a little more than three minutes after liftoff. The upper stage ignited its two BE-3U engines and continued its ascent to orbit while the first stage headed towards a landing on Jacklyn, a Blue Origin ship that serves as a landing platform in the Atlantic Ocean. Read More

Other News From the Week

LAUNCH

Starship upper stage lost on seventh test flight

SpaceX's seventh Starship/Super Heavy test flight ended prematurely Jan. 16 when the Starship upper stage was apparently lost while ascending into space. While booster successfully landed, the upper stage was lost and was later spotted breaking up on reentry. Read More


Stoke Space raises $260 million
Stoke Space has raised $260 million to advance development of a fully reusable medium-lift launch vehicle and its Cape Canaveral launch site. Stoke announced Jan. 15 that it raised a Series C round from a group and new and returning investors. The company declined to disclose the valuation of the round, stating only that it has raised $480 million to date, including a $100 million Series B in October 2023. Read More


Falcon 9 launches American and Japanese commercial lunar landers

The Falcon 9 lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center's Launch Complex 39A at 1:11 a.m. Eastern. After two burns of the rocket's upper stage, the Blue Ghost 1 lander by Firefly Aerospace separated more than 65 minutes after launch. The upper stage later performed a brief third burn before deploying the HAKUTO-R M2 Resilience lander for ispace nearly 93 minutes after liftoff. Both landers were placed into transfer orbits around the Earth. Read More

CIVIL

Yutu-2 rover likely immobile on the moon after historic lunar far side mission

China's Yutu-2 rover, part of the first ever mission to land on the far side of the moon, may have made its final tracks, NASA lunar orbiter images reveal. The latest Chinese media report on the progress of Yutu-2, in September 2024, stated that the six-wheeled, solar powered rover had driven a total of 1,613 meters. However, imagery from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) reveals that Yutu-2 appears to have been stationary since March 2024. Read More


Hubble budget cuts could impact science and mission operations

At a town hall session during the 245th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society Jan. 14, representatives of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI), which handles science operations of Hubble, said cuts in the telescope's budget proposed by NASA could reduce the effectiveness of the nearly 35-year-old observatory. Read More

MILITARY

Space Force procurement official removed amid investigation

The Department of the Air Force has removed Derek Tournear from his position as director of the U.S. Space Force's Space Development Agency (SDA), SpaceNews has learned. A department spokesperson said Tournear was placed on administrative leave as of Jan. 16 pending the results of an investigation but did not elaborate on the circumstances and declined to provide additional details about the investigation. Read More


Trump taps space and intelligence veteran Troy Meink as Air Force secretary

President-elect Donald Trump has selected Troy Meink, a senior intelligence official with extensive space and defense experience, to serve as secretary of the Air Force, signaling a strong emphasis on space capabilities for his incoming administration. The nomination, announced Jan. 16, would place a veteran of both military operations and intelligence acquisitions at the helm of a department that oversees not only the Air Force but also the newest military branch, the Space Force. Read More

OPINION

Do the Space Launch System and Orion have a future under the Trump administration?


Artemis crew inspects Orion

By Chris Carberry, Jan. 15, 2025


Since the recent presidential election, there's been a flurry of speculation about the future of NASA's Moon to Mars plans during the second Trump administration. Will we accelerate plans to return to the moon and Mars? Will NASA be restructured? And, how will these plans align with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)?


The speculation has been particularly intense regarding the future of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion crew vehicle. Some pundits have called for the outright cancellation of SLS and Orion, citing the cost of these vehicles and delays in their development. However, the immediate cancellation of these vehicles may be premature. Read More


The Trump administration should leverage private space stations to counter China

By Kam Ghaffarian


Space to grow: American leadership in space commerce

By Don Graves


SpaceNews is committed to publishing our community's diverse perspectives. Whether you're an academic, executive, engineer or even just a concerned citizen of the cosmos, send your arguments and viewpoints to opinion@spacenews.com to be considered for publication online or in our next magazine.

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The good and the bad from Starship’s flight

Plus: An investigation at SDA and Trump's nominee for Air Force secretary
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A SpaceNews daily newsletter

01/17/2025

Top Stories

A SpaceX Starship vehicle broke apart on its latest test flight Thursday, dealing a setback to the company. The Starship/Super Heavy vehicle lifted off from SpaceX's Starbase facility at Boca Chica, Texas, at 5:37 p.m. Eastern on the seventh test flight of the system. The Super Heavy booster was able to return to the launch site for a "catch" by the launch tower, repeating a feat first accomplished on a flight in October. However, SpaceX lost contact with the Starship upper stage nearly eight and a half minutes after liftoff, after telemetry showed that several of its Raptor engines had shut down. SpaceX later confirmed the vehicle was lost, and videos on social media showed debris from the vehicle falling through the skies above the Turks and Caicos Islands in the Caribbean. Dozens of airline flights in the region had to be rerouted to avoid the debris, which did not cause damage. SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said a propellant leak likely triggered a fire in the vehicle. [SpaceNews]


The head of the Space Force's Space Development Agency (SDA) has been placed on administrative leave. The Department of the Air Force has removed Derek Tournear from his position as director of SDA Thursday pending the results of an investigation, but the department did not elaborate on the nature of the investigation. Sources claimed the investigation into Tournear may be linked to complaints from contractors about SDA's unconventional procurement methods and alleged improper sharing of proprietary information. Lt. Gen. Philip Garrant, commander of the Space Force's Space Systems Command, will step in as acting director of the SDA during the investigation. [SpaceNews]  


The incoming Trump administration will nominate an NRO official to be Secretary of the Air Force. Trump has selected Troy Meink, principal deputy director of the NRO, to be the next Secretary of the Air Force, pending Senate confirmation. Meink is a senior intelligence official with extensive space and defense experience, and his selection indicates a strong emphasis on space capabilities for the incoming administration. Meink has championed the agency's shift toward a more distributed satellite architecture, a strategy aimed at making space-based intelligence capabilities more resilient to potential threats. SpaceX's Elon Musk reportedly advocated for Meink. [SpaceNews]


Sierra Space has passed an early review of an alternative navigation satellite design. The company said Thursday the satellite it is designing for the Resilient Global Positioning System (R-GPS) program passed a system requirements review. Sierra Space is one of four companies selected for the R-GPS program to bolster the existing GPS satellite constellation with a fleet of smaller and more affordable satellites. The other three companies are Astranis, Axient and L3Harris. The Space Force plans to select up to two companies in 2026 to produce eight satellites, scheduled for launch by 2028. [SpaceNews]


Government officials expect the incoming Trump administration to preserve space weather programs. Efforts to better understand the sun, produce timely warnings of heightened geomagnetic activity and mitigate their terrestrial impact have been reinforced by the last several administrations. Officials at the American Meteorological Society annual meeting this week said they expect that trend to continue in the next Trump administration. Space weather experts do anticipate some changes, including a shift of national space weather activities toward providing timely alerts and warnings to the Defense Department and increasing the resilience of military systems. [SpaceNews]


Voyager Space is changing its name to better reflect a focus on national security and defense markets. The company announced Thursday it has renamed itself Voyager Technologies and is restructuring its operations into three business segments: Defense and National Security, Space Solutions, and Starlab Space Stations. The changes, company executives said, are intended to highlight its work on national security capabilities, including missile propulsion, advanced navigation, and sensing solutions. [SpaceNews]


Other News

China launched a Pakistani remote sensing satellite Thursday night. A Long March 2D rocket lifted off at 11:07 p.m. Eastern from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center. It placed into orbit PRSC-EO1, the first of a series of three optical remote sensing satellites for Pakistan. These satellites will provide data for the fields of land mapping, agriculture classification and assessment, urban and rural planning, environmental monitoring, natural disaster monitoring and management, surveying, natural resources protection and others uses, according to Pakistan's space agency, SUPARCO. [SpaceNews]


German company Rocket Factory Augsburg (RFA) has received a license from British regulators for its first launch. The Civil Aviation Authority announced Thursday it issued a launch license for the RFA ONE rocket, launching from SaxaVord Spaceport in the Shetland Islands. The license allows RFA to conduct up to 10 launches a year. RFA says it is working towards a first test flight of RFA ONE later this year after suffering a setback last August when the first stage of the rocket was destroyed during a static-fire test. The license is the first for a vertical launch from the U.K. [SpaceNews]


Xplore has launched the first satellite of a planned 12-spacecraft constellation. The company's XCUBE-1 6U cubesat was among the payloads on the Transporter-12 rideshare mission Tuesday. Xplore says the spacecraft will supply data for space domain awareness, precision agriculture, forestry management, astronomy and other applications. The company is working on a constellation with a focus on collecting hyperspectral data. [SpaceNews]


Two NASA astronauts conducted repairs outside the International Space Station Thursday. Astronauts Nick Hague and Suni Williams spent six hours outside the station on a spacewalk, repairing an astrophysics instrument called NICER and replacing a rate gyro assembly used to control the station's attitude. They also replaced a reflector that is part of a docking system used for visiting vehicles and inspected the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer instrument ahead of future repairs of it. The spacewalk was the first in more than a year by NASA astronauts after suit problems postponed spacewalks planned for mid-2024. [Space.com]


The departing head of space acquisition at the Pentagon says his biggest regret is not getting a long-delayed GPS ground system completed. Frank Calvelli, outgoing assistant secretary of the Air Force for space acquisition and integration, said he had hoped to get the Operational Control System (OCX) program completed in 2024, but the long-delayed effort has slipped into late 2025. OCX is needed to take full advantage of new capabilities on GPS 3 satellites. [Breaking Defense]


South Korea's space agency held talks with ESA about cooperation on various programs. A meeting this week between ESA and Korea Aerospace Administration (KASA) officials discussed potential partnerships in Earth and space science as well as navigation and space weather. That could include cooperation on ESA's planned Vigil mission to study the sun from the Earth-sun L-5 Lagrange point and a proposed KASA mission to carry out similar studies from the Earth-sun L-4 point. [Chosun Ilbo]


Astro Dashcam

"Rubin Observatory will be our dashcam for the sky."


– Yusra AlSayyad of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, discussing at a briefing at the 245th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society Thursday how the observatory will be able to monitor the night sky for rare and unusual events.


What's New With SpaceNews?

Space Minds podcast promo

Register now for updates and new episodes of our upcoming podcast, Space Minds, every Thursday starting Jan. 23. Join David Ariosto, Mike Gruss and journalists from the SpaceNews team for new episodes every Thursday on SpaceNews.com, YouTube and wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.

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Trump 2.0 Webinar Replay 🇺🇸

And the Space Minds podcast launching soon  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ...