Thursday, July 9, 2026

Blue Origin looks to outside funding

Plus: ispace expands lunar transportation plans
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07/09/2026

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By Jeff Foust


In today's edition: Blue Origin looks to raise outside funding, ispace expands its lunar transportation plans, space companies pitch new business opportunities for Golden Dome and more. 


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Top Stories


Blue Origin is looking to raise $10 billion in the company's first outside funding round. A report Wednesday said that the company was in talks with investors led by Coatue Management that would value Blue Origin at $130 billion. The company has not publicly commented on the report but CEO Dave Limp appeared to confirm it in a memo to employees, saying the round had "been in the works for some time." The round would be the first outside investment the company has taken in its history; founder Jeff Bezos has funded the company to date by selling Amazon.com shares. The round comes as Blue Origin is embarking on several capital-intensive projects, from rebuilding its New Glenn launch pad to broadband and orbital data center constellations. [SpaceNews]


Japanese lunar company ispace plans to use SpaceX's Starship to send larger payloads to the moon. The company announced Wednesday it purchased 500 kilograms of payload space on a Starship lunar lander mission flying as soon as 2030. A rover system will deploy from the lander to take payloads up to several kilometers away. The Starship deal would be in addition to ispace's existing, smaller lunar landers, meeting growing demand for lunar payload services stimulated by NASA's moon base plans. [SpaceNews]


MDA Space is buying an Earth data analytics company in its second big acquisition in recent weeks. MDA said Wednesday it will buy 70% of Collecte Localisation Satellites (CLS) for about $650 million in cash. CLS is a 40-year-old French company that uses satellite data for Earth science data analytics and for marine tracking. The French space agency CNES will retain its 30% stake in CLS. MDA Space announced last month it would buy smallsat manufacturer Blue Canyon Technologies for $620 million in cash. The deals are part of a wave of mergers and acquisitions in the space sector in recent months that have involved companies ranging from Globalstar and Iridium to lunar lander company Astrobotic. [SpaceNews]


The proposed Golden Dome missile-defense system has companies looking for new business opportunities. The prospect of deploying hundreds or even thousands of satellites for missile warning, tracking, communications and even interception missions has prompted companies to search for opportunities beyond the spacecraft themselves. That includes areas such as satellite refueling, orbital transportation, communications relay networks and in-space servicing, as companies argue those services will be essential to Golden Dome's satellite constellations. However, the Pentagon, which has disclosed few details about the Golden Dome architecture, has not indicated its interest in those other services. [SpaceNews]


Other News


SpaceX set a booster reuse record on its latest Starlink mission. A Falcon 9 lifted off at 5:25 am Eastern Thursday from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida, putting 29 Starlink satellites into orbit. The launch was the 36th flight of this Falcon 9 booster, designated B1067, which made its first flight five years ago. [Spaceflight Now]


The latest application for Starlink is dog tracking. Pet technology company Fi launched a dog tracker Wednesday that uses T-Mobile's Starlink-enabled T-Satellite service to remain connected across the United States, even outside the telco's terrestrial network. The company said Fi Ultra marks the first consumer product outside smartphones to ship with Starlink Direct-to-Cell as a core feature. The company expects a "meaningful share" of its customer base to upgrade to the Starlink-enabled tracker, especially those in rural regions or who travel in remote areas. [SpaceNews]


Singapore's new space agency has signed a cooperative agreement with Japan. At the Spacetide conference this week, the National Space Agency of Singapore (NSAS) signed a memorandum of cooperation with the Japanese space agency JAXA covering potential joint work in areas ranging from space technology to industry development. The agreement is the first signed by NSAS since it began operations April 1. The agency has several mandates, which include growing the country's space industry and developing a national space law. [SpaceNews]


Cosmic rays could help detect orbiting nuclear weapons. A study published this week discussed how a satellite could determine if another satellite had a nuclear weapon by approaching it with a neutron detector. A surge of neutrons would be a telltale sign that the spacecraft had a nuclear weapon, as cosmic rays would interact with the bomb's fissile material creating the neutrons. Experts caution, though, that the satellite with detectors would have to come very close to the spacecraft to detect the neutron, which would raise concerns. [Science News]


Spherical tanks that washed ashore on an Australian beach likely came from a launch vehicle. The metallic tanks, about a meter across, washed ashore over the weekend on beaches in Queensland. The Australian Space Agency said it concluded the tanks are pressure vessels from a launch vehicle. It added it believes it has identified the source of the tanks but did not disclose it, saying it was in discussions with international authorities to confirm the source of the tanks. [New York Times]


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"Interoperability is for losers at this point in time."


– Rohit Jha, CEO of satellite optical communications company Transcelestial, arguing during a panel at the Spacetide conference Thursday that the field was too young to set standards that would allow different systems to be compatible with one another.


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Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Editor’s Choice: What China’s Tianwen-2 asteroid mission has already taught us

Plus: The Swift reboost mission is en route
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07/08/2026

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By Dan Robitzski


A good scientific experiment begins with a question or assumption about some aspect of how the universe works, and then tests as many explanations for the phenomenon as possible. And then, only by trying and failing to disprove their assumptions can scientists say that they’ve made a new finding — for example, vaccines work because clinical trials have such tightly controlled variables, and we’ve learned a great deal about how the universe behaves thanks to instruments that can repeatedly take extremely sensitive measurements.


But those assumptions are always subject to change once new data emerge, which is all to highlight just how impressive and surprising it is that one grainy photo that China’s Tianwen-2 mission took of the asteroid Kamoสปoalewa has already updated our understanding of it.


Near-Earth asteroid Kamo'oalewa imaged from a distance of 20 km by Tianwen-2, July 2, 2026. Credit: CNSA

Near-Earth asteroid Kamo'oalewa imaged from a distance of 20 km by Tianwen-2, July 2, 2026. Credit: CNSA

The China National Space Administration announced July 6 that the Tianwen-2 spacecraft had recently completed a 400-day journey of roughly 1 billion kilometers that brought it within 20 kilometers of Kamoสปoalewa, where it snapped a comparatively close-up image. Tianwen-2, which carries 11 scientific payloads, will later attempt to gather samples to ship back to Earth. Those samples and other data gathered will tell scientists more about the asteroid and its origins, but the image itself has already taught us quite a lot. Namely:


  • How big Kamoสปoalewa is. Ground-based observations suggested that the asteroid was anywhere from 40 to 100 meters across, though James Webb Space Telescope observations suggested an 18-meter diameter. Based on the photo, the asteroid is just over 20 meters across. New data; one of two hypotheses disproven.

  • What Kamoสปoalewa is made of. Some scientists suspected that Kamoสปoalewa began as a chunk of the far side of the moon that was knocked into orbit from a significant impact. But the image revealed that it has a high geometric albedo, meaning its surface is particularly reflective. The moon, by contrast, has a lower geometric albedo — a mismatch that suggests Kamoสปoalewa is asteroidal in origin.

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3

The number of European companies that NASA added to its Commercial Satellite Data Acquisition program, which provides a commercial procurement framework through which NASA can acquire commercial datasets to complement its own Earth science missions and research activities. Kuva Space (Finland), OroraTech (Germany) and Satlantis (Spain) were added alongside five American companies, bringing the total tally to 25 private firms.

Northrop Grumman’s Pegasus XL rocket carrying the Link spacecraft, attached to its L-1011 aircraft, en route to Kwajalein Atoll for the launch of the Swift reboost mission. Credit: Northrop Grumman

Northrop Grumman’s Pegasus XL rocket carrying the Link spacecraft, attached to its L-1011 aircraft, en route to Kwajalein Atoll for the launch of the Swift reboost mission. Credit: Northrop Grumman

THE SWIFT REBOOST MISSION BEGINS


A few editions of this newsletter ago, I described how the attempt to boost the orbit of the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory and prevent the 22-year-old space telescope from breaking up during reentry could herald a new era of spacecraft servicing. Now, it’s time to see how things pan out. On July 3, a Northrop Grumman Pegasus XL — the final mission for the air-launched rocket — ferried Katalyst Space’s Link spacecraft into orbit, where it will approach Swift and attempt to tow it farther from Earth.


For now, Katalyst will spend two weeks conducting checks on the Link spacecraft while they use it to survey Swift, searching for possible locations to grapple onto and begin the three-month reboosting process.

Trending This Week


SpaceX launched the latest in its Transporter series of rideshare missions July 7 as industry concerns about the program’s future reached what one rival company executive called a panic.


Iridium Communications has completed its takeover of Aireon, bringing the aircraft-tracking venture fully in-house ahead of the satellite operator’s planned $8 billion sale to Rocket Lab.


Blue Origin is continuing to develop its Blue Moon lunar landers, with seven vehicles in production, while recovering from the New Glenn pad explosion more than a month ago.


Hongqing Technology, the satellite manufacturing affiliate of launch firm Landspace, closed a fundraising round of more than 1.3 billion yuan ($191 million), one of the largest single raises for a Chinese commercial satellite maker.


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Blue Origin looks to outside funding

Plus: ispace expands lunar transportation plans  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ...