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ASTRONAUTS PLAN SATURDAY SPACEWALK AT SPACE STATION ASTRONAUTS PLAN SATURDAY SPACEWALK AT SPACE STATION - Two NASA astronauts are scheduled for the fifth spacewalk of the year Saturday at the International Space Station. Michael Hopkins and Victor Glover will exit the station's Quest airlock about 7:30 a.m. EST to conduct space-based maintenance on the orbiting platform for about 6 1/2 hours. Hopkins and Glover will attempt to connect power cables for the new European science platform, Bartolomeo, that they could not connect in January due to a mechanical problem.   More
(Source: UPI - Mar 13)


SPACE STATION CREW TO RELOCATE SOYUZ TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW CREWMATES SPACE STATION CREW TO RELOCATE SOYUZ TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW CREWMATES - Three residents of the International Space Station will take a spin around their orbital neighborhood in the Soyuz MS-17 on Friday, March 19, relocating the spacecraft to prepare for the arrival of the next set of crew members. Live coverage on NASA Television, the NASA app, and the agency’s website will begin at 12:15 p.m. EDT.   More
(Source: NASA - Mar 13)


EXCLUSIVE: MYANMAR'S FIRST SATELLITE HELD BY JAPAN ON SPACE STATION AFTER COUP EXCLUSIVE: MYANMAR'S FIRST SATELLITE HELD BY JAPAN ON SPACE STATION AFTER COUP - Myanmar’s first satellite is being held on board the International Space Station following the Myanmar coup, while Japan’s space agency and a Japanese university decide what to do with it, two Japanese university officials said. The $15 million satellite was built by Japan’s Hokkaido University in a joint project with Myanmar’s government-funded Myanmar Aerospace Engineering University (MAEU). It is the first of a set of two 50 kg microsatellites equipped with cameras designed to monitor agriculture and fisheries.   More
(Source: Reuters - Mar 13)


FRANCE RUNS SATELLITE WAR GAME IN EUROPEAN FIRST FRANCE RUNS SATELLITE WAR GAME IN EUROPEAN FIRST - France on Friday prepared to simulate an attack by a hostile power on one of its satellites in a war game scenario the government said is less outlandishly futuristic than it may seem. President Emmanuel Macron was to watch onsite as his military chiefs started to play out a four-day sequence in which an unnamed space-capable power attacks a nation allied to France, and tries to take out a French communications satellite.   More
(Source: The Defense Post - Mar 13)


CRITICS TAKE AIM AT SPACEX’S STARLINK, AMAZON’S PROJECT KUIPER AND OTHER SATELLITE CONSTELLATIONS CRITICS TAKE AIM AT SPACEX’S STARLINK, AMAZON’S PROJECT KUIPER AND OTHER SATELLITE CONSTELLATIONS - SpaceX, Amazon and OneWeb say their satellite mega-constellations will make broadband internet goodness available to billions of people around the world who are unserved or underserved — but some say those promises have to be weighed against the potential perils. These critics cite the risk of catastrophic satellite collisions, concerns about cybersecurity and worries about environmental and health impacts — including impacts on astronomical observations and the beauties of the night sky.   More
(Source: GeekWire - Mar 12)


CHINA SUCCESSFULLY LAUNCHES NEW LONG MARCH 7A ON SECOND ATTEMPT CHINA SUCCESSFULLY LAUNCHES NEW LONG MARCH 7A ON SECOND ATTEMPT - China launched a new-generation Long March 7A rocket Thursday, sending a classified, experimental payload into geosynchronous transfer orbit. Liftoff from the coastal Wenchang Satellite Launch Center occurred at 12:51 p.m. Eastern March 11. The China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp. (CASC), the country’s main space contractor, confirmed launch success 40 minutes later (Chinese). The payload was the Shiyan-9, or “experiment-9”, technology verification satellite. It was developed by the China Academy of Space Technology (CAST), a CASC subsidiary.    More
(Source: SpaceNews - Mar 12)


SPACEX ADDS MORE SATELLITES TO STARLINK INTERNET FLEET SPACEX ADDS MORE SATELLITES TO STARLINK INTERNET FLEET - Continuing a high-tempo launch cadence, SpaceX delivered another batch of 60 Starlink internet satellites to orbit early Thursday after a seemingly flawless liftoff from Cape Canaveral aboard a Falcon 9 rocket. Then Falcon 9 rocket’s nine Merlin 1D main engines roared to life and the 229-foot-tall (70-meter) launcher climbed away from pad 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station at 3:13:29 a.m. EST (0813:29 GMT) Thursday, beginning SpaceX’s seventh mission of the year from Florida’s Space Coast.   More
(Source: SpaceFlight Now - Mar 11)


NASA ASTRONAUT JOINS RUSSIAN SOYUZ CREW FOR APRIL FLIGHT TO SPACE STATION NASA ASTRONAUT JOINS RUSSIAN SOYUZ CREW FOR APRIL FLIGHT TO SPACE STATION - NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei, veteran of a 168-day stay in space in 2017-18, will join two Russian cosmonauts aboard a Soyuz spacecraft April 9 for a flight back to the International Space Station in a deal brokered through Houston-based Axiom Space, NASA and the Russian space agency announced Tuesday. While NASA funded the development of SpaceX and Boeing commercial crew capsules to end the agency’s post-shuttle reliance on Russia for space transportation, continued launches aboard the Soyuz will ensure a U.S. presence on the lab even if an American spacecraft and crew are forced to make an unplanned departure.   More
(Source: SpaceFlight Now - Mar 11)


BATA BLAST: SATELLITE IMAGES SHOW EQUATORIAL GUINEA DESTRUCTION BATA BLAST: SATELLITE IMAGES SHOW EQUATORIAL GUINEA DESTRUCTION - New satellite images reveal the extent of destruction in Equatorial Guinea's main city Bata following explosions at a munitions depot on Sunday. The official death toll has now reached 105, with at least 600 injured. Rights groups say the casualty figures could be significantly higher and have called for an independent investigation, with questions being asked about why stockpiles of explosives were being stored in a populated area.   More
(Source: BBC News - Mar 11)


STARTUP USING SOVIET-ERA TECHNOLOGY TO BUILD SATELLITE SERVICING VEHICLE STARTUP USING SOVIET-ERA TECHNOLOGY TO BUILD SATELLITE SERVICING VEHICLE - A Ukrainian startup is building an in-orbit servicing vehicle using space docking technology developed decades ago by the former Soviet Union. The startup, named Kurs Orbital, was co-founded by the former head of Ukraine’s space agency Volodymyr Usov. The company plans to launch a demonstration vehicle in 2023, Usov told SpaceNews. Investments are pouring into launch vehicles and satellites, and servicing could be the next segment of the industry to gain traction, he said.    More
(Source: SpaceNews - Mar 11)

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