ARISS SSTV TRANSMISSIONS APRIL 11-14 - ARISS Russia is planning Slow Scan Television (SSTV) image transmissions on 145.800 MHz FM from the International Space Station. The transmissions begin Thursday, April 11, 2019 around 18:00 UTC and run continuously until approximately 18:00 UTC on Sunday, April 14, 2019. This event uses a computer in the ISS Russian Segment, which stores images that are then transmitted to Earth using the ARISS amateur radio station located in the Service Module which employs the Kenwood TM D710E transceiver. More (Source: AMSAT-UK - Apr 11)
IRAN SAYS IT WILL PUSH AHEAD WITH SATELLITE LAUNCHES DESPITE US OPPOSITION - Iran said on Tuesday it would press ahead with the launch of three satellites into orbit this year despite a US move to curb Tehran’s ballistic missile program which Washington says has been advanced by the satellite activity. President Donald Trump said on Monday he would name Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps a terrorist organization, a move partly intended to curb the Islamic Republic’s development of ballistic missiles. More (Source: New York Post - Apr 11)
INTELSAT-29E SATELLITE SUFFERS FUEL LEAK, SPOTTED DRIFTING ALONG GEO ARC - Intelsat’s first Epic-series high-throughput satellite, Intelsat-29e, is drifting in orbit after back-to-back anomalies, forcing the company to shift customers to other spacecraft. Intelsat said April 10 that the propulsion system on the three-year-old satellite “experienced damage” — the cause of which it did not identify — resulting in a fuel leak. While attempting to restore services from the satellite, Intelsat said a second problem surfaced that resulted in a loss of communications with the satellite. More (Source: Space News - Apr 11)
NASA HIGHLIGHTS SCIENCE ON NEXT CYGNUS MISSION TO ISS - NASA will host a media teleconference at 1 p.m. EDT Wednesday, April 10, to discuss select science investigations and technology demonstrations launching on the next Northrop Grumman commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station. Northrop Grumman is targeting Wednesday, April 17, for the launch of its Cygnus spacecraft on an Antares rocket from pad 0A at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Virginia. More (Source: Space Daily - Apr 11)
SPACEX JUST DELAYED THE FALCON HEAVY ROCKET’S FIRST COMMERCIAL MISSION TO THURSDAY - Update April 10th, 7:30PM ET: SpaceX has delayed the launch to Thursday, April 11th due to high winds. Original: This afternoon, SpaceX’s most powerful rocket — which is also the most powerful rocket in the world at the moment — will take its second flight to space from Florida more than a year after its famous debut mission. It will be the Falcon Heavy’s very first customer launch, sending a communications satellite for Saudi Arabia to a high orbit above Earth. All three cores of the rocket will attempt to land back on Earth after takeoff. More (Source: The Verge - Apr 11)
SPACEX SETS LAUNCH DATE FOR LATEST FALCON 9 RESUPPLY MISSION TO ISS FOR NASA - NASA has a time and date for the next launch of experiments, supplies and other materials to the International Space Station. The early morning SpaceX mission to send a Falcon 9 rocket carrying resupply materials to ISS astronauts will head into space at 5:55 a.m., Friday, April 26. The rocket will launch from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on the Space Coast. More (Source: Orlando Sentinel - Apr 10)
NEW SATELLITE PHOTOS SHOW CLIMATE CHANGE IS SWEEPING EUROPE - Climate change is picking up pace in Europe, thrusting farmers and power generators onto the front lines of a battle with nature that threatens to upend the lives of the half billion people who occupy the world’s biggest trading bloc. Last year was the third hottest on record and underlines “the clear warming trend” experienced in the last four decades, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service, which operates a network of satellites for the European Union that collects weather, soil, air and water data. More (Source: Bloomberg - Apr 10)
SPACEWALKING ASTRONAUTS BATTLE STUCK PANEL, WRANGLE CABLES ON SPACE STATION - Two spacewalking astronauts completed their work on time today (April 8), despite a stubborn panel on the International Space Station that added several minutes of troubleshooting to their tasks. NASA astronaut Anne McClain and Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques spent six hours and 29 minutes completing several repairs and upgrade tasks on the space station. Internet cable work at the U.S. laboratory caused some problems for the duo. More (Source: Space.com - Apr 9)
SPACEX TO LAUNCH 1ST BATCH OF STARLINK SATELLITES FROM CAPE CANAVERAL - SpaceX plans to officially kick off its ambitious goal of sending thousands of satellites from Florida to low Earth orbit this year. The Hawthorne, California-based company said it will begin its Starlink constellation mission no earlier than May, launching its first batch of satellites from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's Launch Complex 40. Over the course of several years, SpaceX will use its rockets to send up to 12,000 satellites to space to expand Internet connectivity around the world. More (Source: Orlando Business Journal - Apr 9)
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