OLDEST GPS NAVIGATION SATELLITE TO BE RETIRED WITH NEXT LAUNCH - A new Global Positioning System craft will ride a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket into orbit next month to replace a satellite that has operated in space for 25 years. Stacking of the two-stage launcher for ULA’s first mission of 2016 began this morning at Cape Canaveral’s Vertical Integration Facility next to Complex 41. Liftoff is planned for Feb. 3 during a morning launch window of 8:47 to 9:05 a.m. EST (1347-1405 GMT). The three-and-a-half hour rocket flight will deliver the payload 11,000 nautical miles above Earth. More (Source: SpaceFlight Now - Jan 12)
THESE ARE THE SPACE MISSIONS TO WATCH IN 2016 - Spaceflight fans will have a lot of cosmic action to keep them happy in 2016. While the coming year does not appear to promise anything quite as spectacular or awe-inspiring as 2015's signature moment - the July 14 flyby of Pluto by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft - there will still be a lot going on overhead. Here's a brief rundown of the biggest spaceflight miletones to keep an eye out for in 2016, from a NASA probe's arrival at Jupiter to the highly anticipated maiden flight of SpaceX's huge new rocket. More (Source: Space.com - Jan 12)
DAVID BOWIE HAD A SPECIAL PLACE ON THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION - Back in 2013, Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield paid homage to David Bowie with a version of the 1969 song "Space Oddity" filmed on the International Space Station. The video has some slight changes in lyrics, and Hadfield singing from orbit above Earth, all with David Bowie's blessing. It garnered more than 20 million views in the first year it was on YouTube, but was temporarily pulled after its initial year-long run, which was was the original agreement. The duo hashed out a new two-year agreement in 2014, so you can still watch Hadfield's performance, which was the first music video shot in space when Hadfield was on board during Expedition 35. More (Source: Orlando Sentinel - Jan 12)
HOW TO DEAL WITH A MEDICAL EMERGENCY ON THE SPACE STATION - A major medical emergency has never occurred on the International Space Station - but what would happen if it did? And what lessons could be learnt for treating similar emergencies on Earth? When Tim Peake blasted into orbit in December, he knew that the 40 hours of medical training he'd received would prepare him for most health problems during his six-month stay on the International Space Station. More (Source: BBC News - Jan 10)
FLORIDA SPACEPORT TALLIES HIGHEST LAUNCH RATE IN MORE THAN A DECADE - Cape Canaveral was the departure point for more space launches in 2015 than in any year since 2003, with 17 takeoffs by Atlas, Falcon and Delta rockets hoisting U.S. military satellites, commercial payloads and cargo for the International Space Station. United Launch Alliance’s Atlas 5 rocket flew nine times last year, including eight launches from Florida, matching its launch record from 2014. ULA’s Delta 4 launcher logged two missions in 2015, both from Cape Canaveral. More (Source: SpaceFlight Now - Jan 10)
TIM PEAKE TO GO ON SIX-HOUR SPACEWALK TO REPAIR INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION - Tim Peake is to mark his first month on the International Space Station by climbing into a spacesuit and taking a walk outside. Britain’s first European Space Agency astronaut has been called on to perform a six-hour “extra-vehicular activity” (EVA) to replace a broken solar-power unit and lay cables for future docking ports. The spacewalk - with the Nasa astronaut Tim Kopra - is planned for 15 January with the station commander, Scott Kelly, helping them in and out of their spacesuits. The EVA will be Kopra’s second since arriving at the station. More (Source: The Guardian - Jan 6)
NASA TO LAUNCH JASON-3 OCEAN SURFACE-MEASURING SATELLITE ON SPACEX ROCKET - NASA is preparing for the upcoming launch of the Jason-3 satellite from the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. The spacecraft is being installed into the payload fairing at the end of this week and will be attached to the launch rocket’s second stage in the coming week. The satellite will be propelled into orbit on January 17 from the West Coast launch pad. The launch rocket itself is an early-model Falcon 9, produced by Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corporation, better known as SpaceX. More (Source: Yahoo - Jan 5)
RUSSIA TO CONTINUE LAUNCHING EARLY WARNING DEFENSE SATELLITES - Russia's Aerospace Forces will continue to launch satellites in 2016 for its missile attack early warning system, Rambler News Service reported on Sunday. The Russian military is believed to have launched the first early warning satellite for its new United Space System sometime in late 2015. Information about launches from the Plesetsk Comodrome is classified, although the military confirmed that the launch would be its second for the early warning system. More (Source: Sputnik International - Jan 4)
2016 MANIFEST PREVIEW: UNITED LAUNCH ALLIANCE’S BUSY YEAR AHEAD - Some of America's most critical surveillance satellites, final members of other spacecraft series and a probe that will touch an asteroid are among 15 rocket flights planned by United Launch Alliance in 2016. It will be the 10th anniversary year for ULA, the launch firm that flies Atlas 5, Delta 4 and Delta 2 rockets from Cape Canaveral in Florida and Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. More (Source: SpaceFlight Now - Jan 2)
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