
Phobos was determined more scientifically worthwhile than the other Martian moon Deimos for sample collection. Phobos has more diverse compositions with at least two distinct, while Deimos has only one. This implies more information might be available from a Phobos. Scientists also are betting that the closer orbit to Mars means that indirectly Mars can be sampled. The concept is that portions of the Martian surface is expected to be found on the surface of Phobos that was ejected from Mars. Should this hold true, the mission will allow an additional source of information about Mars’s evolution.
The MMX spacecraft will also serve as a testbed and platform to demonstrate the necessary technology for entering and leaving Mars’s Orbit. Once in the Martian gravitational well, the spacecraft would commence a landing and navigating on the surface of low-gravity moon providing valuable data for future missions. As a precursor to a future human mission, MMX will also measure the radiation environment to better assist with spacecraft design to protect humans. All human space travel with the exception of Apollo missions was done in Low Earth Orbit. Traveling beyond LEO means leaving behind the Earth’s protective magnetosphere.
The MMX spacecraft will be equipped with eleven instruments, four of which will be provided by international partners. at NASA (USA), ESA (Europe), CNES (France) and DLR (Germany).
JAXA-built instruments include:
- the telescopic (narrow-angle) camera, TENGOO, for observing detailed terrain,
- the wide-angle camera, OROCHI, for identifying hydrated minerals and organic matter,
- the LIDAR laser altimeter
- the Circum-Martian Dust Monitor, CMDM
- the Mass Spectrum Analyser, MSA to study the charged ions around the moons
- SMP sampling device and sample return capsule,
- the radiation environment monitor, IREM.
International Partners will provide the following:
- NASA(USA) — the gamma ray and neutron spectrometer, MEGANE, to examine the elements that constitute the Martian moons
- NASA(USA) — P-sampler; a pneumatic sampling device.
- CNES — MacrOmega, a near-infrared spectrometer that can identify mineral composition
- CNES & DLR — rover to explore the moon surface.
- ESA will additionally assist with deep space communication equipment.


Bill D'Zio
Co-Founder at WestEastSpace.com
Bill founded WestEastSpace.com after returning to China in 2019 to be supportive of his wife's career. Moving to China meant leaving the US rocket/launch industry behind, as USA and China don't see eye to eye on cooperation in space. Bill has an engineering degree and is an experienced leader of international cross-functional teams with experience in evaluating, optimizing and awarding sub-contracts for complex systems. Bill has worked with ASME Components, Instrumentation and Controls (I&C) for use in launch vehicles, satellites, aerospace nuclear, and industrial applications.
Bill provides consulting services for engineering, supply chain, and project management.
The rise of Big Data as the core lubricant of the digital world
by Alessandro Prosperi | August 1, 2020 | All space related, Big Data, Space Money, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
It’s Not a New Space Race
by Carl Rossi | July 26, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Launch, Space Agencies, Space History | 0 Comments
China and the United States are fierce competitors in economics, technology, military and recently in space exploration. Does this competition imply a new space race patterned on the Cold War race between the US and the former Soviet Union?
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Decision: Apollo 8 To The Moon
by Carl Rossi | July 13, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Launch, Space Agencies, Space History | 0 Comments
The flight of Apollo 8 is an historical watershed in the course of human spaceflight. Its circumlunar mission which climaxed in a dramatic television broadcast on Christmas Eve 1968, marked a point in time when humanity became a true spacefaring culture. While much has been written and reported about the actual flight, including the reading of Genesis by the crew, this essay will concentrate on why Apollo 8 was tasked with flying to the moon.
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Great Britain’s Vertical Empire
by Carl Rossi | July 5, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space Agencies, Space History | 0 Comments
After the end of World war II, British space technology held its own against the bigger, better funded US and Soviet programs. The UK had its sights set on landing astronauts on the Moon.
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The Red Planet
by Carl Rossi | June 29, 2020 | All space related | 0 Comments
Mariner 4 and the end of the myth.
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America’s First Space Station
by Carl Rossi | June 21, 2020 | Space Agencies, Space History, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
Deep space travel has deep crap problems to solve
by Bill D'Zio | June 17, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Launch | 0 Comments
In Space, people need toilets. NASA is spending millions of dollars on developing a new space age toilet to take astronauts to Mars in comfort and safety.
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Can you orbit around a point of empty space? Most people will get this wrong.
by Bill D'Zio | June 16, 2020 | All space related | 0 Comments
The Far Side of the Moon
by Carl Rossi | June 13, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Space History | 0 Comments
Science is the father of knowledge, but opinion breeds ignorance.
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JWST is no comparison to Hubble Space Telescope, here is why.
by Bill D'Zio | June 13, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Space Agencies, Space Money | 0 Comments
Hubble is Big. JWST is BIGGER. JWST is more capable as well. Capable of peering back into the moments just a few hundred million years after the dark period.
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Expect big things from this small company – Alba
by Bill D'Zio | June 11, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Product Review, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
ESA, Stanford, Carnegie Mellon, TU delft all figured out that they can build and launch a satellite for less. The goal of these smart organizations? Miniaturization. But how small? What if I told you that you could hold a satellite in your hand? How about a functional satellite that is the size of a Rubik’s Cube? Sound crazy? It’s not. Here is how.
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The X-15 Rocket Plane
by Carl Rossi | June 6, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space History, sub-orbital | 0 Comments
After World War Two, the United States as well as the United Kingdom and Soviet Union all began programs to develop rocket propulsion as follow on to the German V2.
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NASA’s Lunar Gateway getting HALO and PPE
by Bill D'Zio | June 6, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
A big announcement about the NASA Lunar Gateway came out on Friday June 5th, 2020. NASA officially awarded a contract to Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) for the preliminary design and development of the Habitation and Logistics Outpost (HALO).
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Space Applications for Military: Eyes Beyond the Sky
by Omkar Nikam | June 5, 2020 | All space related, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
For decades, space has been one of the critical assets for military operations. In fact, space technology is a product of defence industry that needed an upgrade in technological capabilities for various military operations since the early 1940s.
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You heard of Star Wars, but did you know there were Space Soda Wars?
by Bill D'Zio | June 4, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
Back when President Reagan was working on his Star Wars strategic defense initiative, there was another struggle going on. Two historic adversaries, each a giant with loyal followers set their aims at a new battlefield of Space. Pepsi and Coca-cola each postured to be the beverage of choice for astronauts.
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NASA Announces Challenge Seeking Innovative Ideas to Advance Missions
by Bill D'Zio | June 4, 2020 | All space related, PRESS RELEASES | 0 Comments
3 technology focus areas.
10 finalists.
$1,000,000 prize pool. Open now. NASA is waiting.
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A Historical Perspective on Chinese Spaceplanes
by Jean Deville | June 4, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space History | 0 Comments
This piece is the first of a two-part blog post by China Aerospace Blog on Chinese spaceplanes posted on WestEastSpace. It sets the context of spaceplanes in China, and goes over past attempts to make such vehicles. Part 2 provides an analysis of projects under development from Chinese state-owned and private companies.
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How to Watch the Starlink Launch
by admin | June 3, 2020 | All space related, Launch, PRESS RELEASES | 0 Comments
Today is the day SpaceX is targeting to launch. On Wednesday June 3 at 9:25 p.m. EDT, 1:25 UTC on June 4, SpaceX plans to launch the eighth batch of Starlink satellites. A Falcon 9 liftoff from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station marks the eighth mission totaling 500 satellites launched to orbit(not including proof of concept).
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How has SpaceX Impacted China’s Space Sector?
by Blaine Curcio | June 3, 2020 | Launch, Space Money, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
First Man of Space
by Carl Rossi | June 3, 2020 | All space related, Space History, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
Neil Armstrong has been referred to as “First Man” as in first man to set foot on the moon. However, the First Man of Space is Yuri Gagarin who became the first human to orbit the earth.
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Elon Musk’s Starlink growing bigger and bigger
by Bill D'Zio | June 2, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
SpaceX is at it again. Love it or hate it, Starlink is growing again. The company is getting ready to launch the next batch of 60 satellites into orbit in just a few days. The original launch was postponed until after the successful launch of the crew dragon Demo-2 mission for NASA.
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SpaceX and NASA to set a new era of human spaceflight after Apollo
by Alessandro Prosperi | June 1, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
Even if SpaceX’s first attempt to make history delayed, the weather finally cooperated. NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley are safely in orbit. The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, carrying the astronauts in their Crew Dragon spacecraft, lifted off from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center at 3:22 p.m. EDT (1922 GMT), May 30. This marks the first human spaceflight from U.S. soil with NASA astronauts on an American rocket and spacecraft since 2011.
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Even Elon Musk can’t control the weather, but Bill Gates wanted to.
by Bill D'Zio | June 1, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
A lot of people wonder, why does a really expensive, powerful rocket get stopped by the weather? Well, a number of factors. In the case of the recent SpaceX launch attempt to send people to the International Space Station, safety of the crew is paramount. The launch vehicle itself has a lot to do with it.
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NASA press release on SpaceX Crew Dragon Launch
by Bill D'Zio | May 31, 2020 | All space related, Launch, PRESS RELEASES | 0 Comments
NASA press release about SpaceX Crew Dragon
by Bill D'Zio | May 31, 2020 | All space related, PRESS RELEASES | 0 Comments
NASA spends $3M on LASVEGAS, wait what??
by Bill D'Zio | May 30, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, PRESS RELEASES | 0 Comments
NASA awarded some pretty odd contracts in the past. NASA also likes catchy acronyms for their projects. The Southwest Research Institute just got $3 million bucks from NASA for LASVEGAS development. No, not Las Vegas the place for high stakes gambling.
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China’s Satellite Internet Ambitions
by Blaine Curcio | May 28, 2020 | Space Money | 0 Comments
Elon Musk’s Keynote at SATELLITE 2020: A Reflection
by Blaine Curcio | May 28, 2020 | Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
I was very much looking forward to watching the Elon Musk keynote at SATELLITE 2020. What would it be like to watch Elon Musk speak? It was, in a word, mind-blowing. Incredible. Thought-provoking. Inspiring. Annoying. But, at the end, Elon Musk certainly did not disappoint. What were the takeaways?
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Can we Talk about ChinaSat’s Market Capitalization?
by Blaine Curcio | May 27, 2020 | Space Money, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
Understanding why did Sir Richard Branson blow up his own rocket!??!
by Bill D'Zio | May 26, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space Money | 0 Comments
We know Virgin Orbit blew up their rocket, but how does that system work?
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Apollo 15 Hammer and Feather – Gravity at work
by admin | May 25, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Uncategorized | 0 Comments
Imagine two objects. We connect one light object and one heavier object to each other by a string. Climb to the top of a tower with these two objects. It is a calm, sunny day with no wind. Once you reach the top, drop both objects from the top of a tower at the same time.
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HTV-9 mission arrives at ISS prior to SpaceX Dragon
by admin | May 25, 2020 | All space related, Space Agencies, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
A short history of the Atlas Rocket
by Carl Rossi | May 25, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
Recently, the X-37B spaceplane lifted off from Cape Canaveral using a United Space Alliance Atlas V as a booster. What is not commonly known by today’s space enthusiasts is that the current version of this booster can trace its origins back in 1957 when the first Atlas flew.
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Is Elon Musk the Steve Jobs of Space?
by Bill D'Zio | May 24, 2020 | All space related, Product Review, Space Money | 2 Comments
Elon Musk and Steve Jobs have something in common. They like perfection. Think of an iPhone, it redefined smartphones. Think of Crew Dragon, it is redefining spacecraft.
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NASA’s doomsday Asteroid plan taking shape, and they are not calling Bruce Willis this time.
by Bill D'Zio | May 23, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
X-37B Launches aboard ULA Atlas V Rocket for Space Force
by Bill D'Zio | May 17, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
Is Elon Musk going to Move Tesla and SpaceX to Texas?
by Bill D'Zio | May 16, 2020 | All space related, Space Money | 2 Comments
With Elon Musk miffed at the state of California, will he follow up and relocate Tesla out of state? With other officials now turning SpaceX down for funding requests, will SpaceX be next to move?
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Space Force X37B secret mission scrubbed by ULA due to bad weather.
by Bill D'Zio | May 16, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
ULA scrubbed the launch of the Atlas V rocket carrying the secret X37B spaceplane for the Space Force.
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New Space Era: Moore’s Law in Action
by Aeroman | May 16, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space Money | 0 Comments
Due to the inevitable advance of technology during the last decades, the space industry has
been developing and it is recently showing an abrupt growth such that, as it is widely referred, the world is entering a new space era.
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Did Japan’s Asteroid space probe find life and shoot it with a bullet?
by Bill D'Zio | May 14, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
Japan is searching for life in space, on an asteroid. Credit JAXA
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Happy Mother’s Day
by Bill D'Zio | May 10, 2020 | All space related | 0 Comments
To all the Mothers out there. Thank you for all your support, hours of time listening to how your kids are going to build space ships. Thank you for taking them to see movies like Star Wars and Star Trek and suffering through them together.
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They build Rocket Engines in Huntsville…. so why not facemasks as well?
by Bill D'Zio | May 10, 2020 | All space related | 0 Comments
Face Masks don’t need to be bland. You had a lot of options, ranging from FALLOUT 4 style to home made custom made masks.
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Tethers Unlimited acquired, and you probably don’t know who bought them but you should.
by Bill D'Zio | May 8, 2020 | All space related, PRESS RELEASES, Space Money | 0 Comments
AMERGINT, don’t know them? You should, they just bought Tethers Unlimited.
There is a space company that you might know about. Pay attention because this company just went on a growth spurt. In a series of press releases, the AMERGINT Technologies, Inc.’s story unfolded.
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China’s vision to provide inexhaustive solar energy by 2050
by Alessandro Prosperi | May 8, 2020 | All space related, Space Money, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
China has a plan. The plan involves having a endless supply of energy produced in space and beamed down to the Earth.
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Is China’s inflatable space tech a $400 Million Cost savings for NASA’s SLS?
by Bill D'Zio | May 7, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
China tested a prototype spacecraft on May 5th, 2020 in efforts to prove the technology was ready. It’s good it was a test and not an actual mission since the spacecraft did not perform as expected.
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China Long March 5B Launch Paving Way for New Space Station and Moon Mission.
by Bill D'Zio | May 5, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
People stood on the hot beach in Hainan Island China. No, a China Cinco de Mayo party isn’t happening on the beach. People gathered for a launch party. They wanted to get a glimpse of the newly upgraded rocket. The Long March 5B rocket carrying the hopes and aspirations of China lifted off from the launch pad in the afternoon of May 5th, 2020.
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Star Wars and Space – May the 4th be with you.
by Bill D'Zio | May 4, 2020 | All space related | 0 Comments
SpaceShipTwo Glides Home to New Mexico
by Bill D'Zio | May 4, 2020 | All space related, Space Money | 0 Comments
Virgin Galactic steps one step closer to its Giant Leap goal. The VSS Unity suborbital spacecraft completed its first unpowered glide flight over Spaceport America. The May 1st flight is one of many milestones needed for commencing commercial flights. Good news for Stockholders and Spaceport America.
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NASA’s SLS Mega Rocket’s Engines are Mega Cost…
by Bill D'Zio | May 3, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
NASA plans to launch the most powerful rocket sometime in the next few years. The goal, bring America along with allies into deep space for longer and farther than ever before. The launch might not happen in 2021 but the first rocket slowly comes into existence. NASA already inked deals for more SLS mega rockets.
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China’s answer to NASA’s Orion to launch in May
by Bill D'Zio | May 3, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
The US isn’t the only country with aspirations of going to deep space. The United States remains the only country to send people beyond Low Earth Orbit. That may change very soon. China is about to test a new spacecraft intended to carry Taikonauts to the moon and beyond.
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New NASA Space Shuttle Slated for 2021, and it has a Name
by Bill D'Zio | May 2, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space Agencies | 2 Comments
Look! Up in the sky! It’s a bird! It’s a spaceplane! No, it’s a lifting body reusable spacecraft to resupply the International Space Station! Part of NASA’s attempt to develop a vibrant space community, NASA solicited awards for commercial resupply missions as well as crewed spacecraft launch services.
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NASA picks who will land people on the Moon… sort of…
by Bill D'Zio | May 1, 2020 | Beyond Earth Orbit, PRESS RELEASES | 0 Comments
One of the three companies NASA announced today will land the next NASA astronauts on the Moon. NASA awarded three firm-fixed-price, milestone-based contracts for the human landing system awards under the Next Space Technologies for Exploration Partnerships (NextSTEP-2. The total combined value for all awarded contracts is $967 million for the 10-month base period.
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The joint ESA–JAXA first space mission to Mercury
by Alessandro Prosperi | April 30, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
Scheduled to begin orbiting Mercury in 2025, BepiColombo is a joint European-Japanese mission to Mercury. The scientific objectives for the mission are to study the planet’s form, interior structure, geology, composition, as well as its craters, origin, and dynamics of its magnetic field, and dynamics of the vestigial atmosphere.
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Elon Musk setting new records with Starlink.
by Bill D'Zio | April 29, 2020 | Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
China’s First Satellite 50 years ago
by Bill D'Zio | April 22, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
Is the China Space Station the Next ISS?
by Denis Kalinin | April 19, 2020 | All space related, Space Agencies, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
How far China has advanced in the construction of its own space stations, compare the manned programs of the USSR and China and find out if the new Chinese Space Station can replace the existing International Space Station (ISS).
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3 Months to Mars 2020, is NASA Ready?
by Bill D'Zio | April 18, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
Time running short for NASA’s Mars missions. With the Mars launch window quickly approaching, NASA needs to manage time carefully. Coronavirus pandemic placed additional complexity on the mission execution.
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NASA Digging up dirt on an asteroid
by Bill D'Zio | April 15, 2020 | Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission arrived at Bennu back in 2018. A major event planned for August and keeping scientists eager to see the results. You might not have heard much about this mission, so let me bring you up to date with some important details.
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NASA to Leave One Astronaut on The Space Station
by Bill D'Zio | April 14, 2020 | All space related, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
For the last nine months, NASA astronaut Andrew Morgan lived and worked on the International Space Station. Morgan’s time on the ISS will come to an end leaving Chris Cassidy as the sole NASA astronaut on the space station.
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The Electron goes reusable.
by Bill D'Zio | April 13, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
No, it’s not a high budget Mission Impossible action movie, but it could have been. Tom Cruise wasn’t piloting a helicopter that grabbed a rocket falling back to the Earth. Instead, a crew wearing black Rocket Lab t-shirts…
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Does NASA have Triskaidekaphobia? (Fear of #13?)
by Bill D'Zio | April 12, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
Roscosmos Miffed, Elon Musk Calls Them Out
by Bill D'Zio | April 11, 2020 | All space related, Space Agencies | 1 Comment
Musk put Roscosmos in their place with a tweet: SpaceX rockets are 80% reusable, theirs are 0%. This is the actual problem.
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A Setback, Palapa N1 Failure
by Blaine Curcio | April 11, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space Money | 0 Comments
The recent failure of a Long March-3B rocket carrying the Palapa-N1 satellite is a setback for the Chinese space industry, with this being the second launch failure in a month following the failure of a Long March-7A. However, the launch failure also represents a setback, and in some instances opportunities in the Indonesian satellite communications (satcom) market.
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BepiColombo Slingshots Past Earth
by Bill D'Zio | April 11, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
A spacecraft buzzed Earth this week. The joint ESA /
JAXA mission flew past on the way to the planet Mercury. Only NASA – National Aeronautics and Space Administration has successfully sent a Spacecraft to the planet.
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Chinese Launched Satellite Seen Crashing Back to Earth Over Guam, USA
by Bill D'Zio | April 10, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
From the US territory Guam, sightings came in of a fireball falling from the sky. The strategic location of Guam and the U.S. military stationed there has drawn attention for years. Guam thrust into the limelight during heightened tensions with North Korea. In August 2017, North Korea launched missiles that flew over Japan and into the northern Pacific Ocean in an apparent attempt to threaten the US territory of Guam. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un did not follow up on his threats, but a fireball came crashing down from a different source.
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Soyuz lifts off to ISS
by Bill D'Zio | April 9, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
International Space Station Expedition 63 team was lofted into orbit on April 9, 2020 with American astronaut Chris Cassidy and his two Russian cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner.
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30 years ago Whos Satellite did China Launch?
by Bill D'Zio | April 8, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Stuff in Orbit | 1 Comment
China First International Commercial Launch Success occurred on April 7th, 1990. You might be surprised who’s satellite China Launched 30 years ago. No, it wasn’t Russia’s, nor Iran… Here is a hint…
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Solo NASA Astronaut to ISS
by Bill D'Zio | April 8, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
The next launch to the Space Station is planned for April 9th and is only a few days away and will leave the ISS with only one NASA astronaut onboard. During a press conference, Astronaut Chris Cassidy answered some questions about the mission.
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Boeing Starliner Wings Clipped. Will Launch Again Without a Crew.
by Bill D'Zio | April 7, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
After missing the International Space Station, Boeing is going to try again to launch the CST-100 Starliner. Try 2 will also be without a crew.
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SmallSats Expanding
by Bill D'Zio | April 6, 2020 | All space related | 0 Comments
Cool Space Legos Pass Time at Home
by Bill D'Zio | April 5, 2020 | All space related, Product Review | 0 Comments
Looking for some things to keep you busy over the weekend, or get your kids to keep them focused. Here are a few cool LEGO ideas for your kids.
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Will Elon Musk Win The Race In Sending People Back to Space?
by Bill D'Zio | April 5, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
There is a lot of attention on the upcoming SpaceX launch for NASA. The hype? NASA is getting the ability to launch astronauts into space from American soil. Did anyone beat NASA back to Space?
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Crew Dragon Demo-2 will be a Really Long Test Drive.
by Bill D'Zio | April 4, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
NASA Worm on Falcon 9 but do you know the story behind it?
by Bill D'Zio | April 3, 2020 | All space related | 2 Comments
China New Space in 2020 catching up.
by Blaine Curcio | April 3, 2020 | All space related | 0 Comments
An Energetic Market: Updates on the Chinese Private Launcher Industry. The latter half of the 2010s saw a plethora of mostly privately-funded, commercially-oriented launch companies emerge from China. Funding is continues to be very strong for these companies.
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3 Fun Space Games to take your Mind off COVID19
by Bill D'Zio | April 2, 2020 | All space related, Product Review | 0 Comments
So we are on month 3 of COVID19 here in Asia. We have had some time to figure out how to keep ourselves from going stir crazy. Playing some boardgames with the kids is a better alternative to youtube or xbox all day long.
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Satellites Are Getting Smaller: Hubble Size to Starlink and Smaller.
by Bill D'Zio | April 2, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
On 4 October 1957 the Soviet Union launched the world’s first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1. It was 83.6 kg, roughly 58 cm in diameter and used 1 watt of power. Over time, satellites grew in size and complexity, but the recent trend is seeing them shrink.
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China Moon Rover still going and so is China
by Bill D'Zio | April 1, 2020 | Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
SpaceX to Launch 2 NASA Astronauts
by Bill D'Zio | April 1, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
On May 5, 1961, astronaut Alan B. Shepard, Jr. view of Earth that no American had seen before. His Freedom 7 Mercury capsule made suborbital flight lasting 15 minutes. Almost 60 years later, SpaceX is about to have two American astronauts see a similar view, but take them further than Shepard went and longer. Cover photo from Freedom 7 Credit NASA
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SpaceX to launch Crew Dragon with JAXA Astronaut
by Bill D'Zio | March 31, 2020 | All space related, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
In a press release by JAXA, Astronaut Noguchi Soichi is going back to the International Space Station. The March 31, 2020 JAXA press release indicated that Noguchi Soichi is currently preparing and training for the ISS Expedition, will start training to board the first operational Crew Dragon under development by Space-X.
Related
NASA SunRISE
by admin | March 30, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
NASA’s new mission called SunRISE will study what drives solar particle storms
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China Space Station – is it worth it?
by Denis Kalinin | March 30, 2020 | All space related | 0 Comments
In April 2020, one of the most significant events for Chinese astronautics should take place – the launch of China’s first multimodular space station. The idea of creating its own large orbital station dates back to the late 1980s. Chinese Space Station (CSS) should become the “crowning glory” of China’s entire manned program over the past 30 years.
Related
Satcom Opportunities and Challenges in the 2020s
by Blaine Curcio | March 29, 2020 | All space related, Space Money | 0 Comments
The SATELLITE Show in Washington DC will celebrate its 40th anniversary in 2021. Over the past 39 years, the show has expanded significantly, from being a show largely focused on satcom, to one focused on a broad variety of different space verticals, including satellite manufacturing, small/medium launch vehicles, Earth Observation, and basically all other elements of the commercial (and in some cases government) space sector. With that being the case, the conference remains at its core one about satcom.
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SpaceX going to the Moon with NASA
by Bill D'Zio | March 28, 2020 | All space related, Beyond Earth Orbit | 1 Comment
NASA may have sidelined the Lunar Gateway for a return mission to the Moon, but it is not stopping the momentum. NASA has awarded several contracts for the Lunar Gateway including the most recent one to SpaceX.
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Watch Out Tesla the Next Car in Space May Be Toyota
by Bill D'Zio | March 27, 2020 | Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
A little over a year after Elon Musk launched his Cherry red Tesla Sports car into space on the debut launch of the Falcon Heavy, JAXA and Toyota announced their collaboration efforts on a manned lunar rover. The March 12, 2019 announcement underlines Japan’s reinforced efforts towards space exploration, leveraging key technologies in which Japan excels, in particular cars. In April 2020, JAXA hopes to ink a deal with NASA to put the rover on the moon together.
Related
Creating a Space for the Space Force
by Blaine Curcio | March 27, 2020 | Space Agencies | 0 Comments
Yesterday saw the first official launch of a military satellite under the United States Space Force, with the AEHF-6 and TDO-2 taking flight on an Atlas-V rocket. The USSF, formally established at the end of 2019, is an indication of the increasing importance of space in the context of national-level strategies. With that being said, as with any large, government-run entity, the Space Force has seen challenges in coming into its own.
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The SpaceX of China set to Launch in 2020
by Bill D'Zio | March 27, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
SpaceX continues to be a trend-setting company. Companies in the world now consider SpaceX a serious player in the launch industry. Other companies strive to achieve the accomplishments SpaceX did in the first ten years of operation. Even cross the pacific ocean and visit China. The SpaceX inspiration shows up in companies like Galactic Energy.
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This is why Elon Musk wanted to avoid Parachutes
by Bill D'Zio | March 26, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
Parachutes are plaguing space programs. SpaceX doesn’t like Parachutes. They are difficult to design, hard to package, and easy to damage. The larger the mass of the spacecraft, the more effort to slow down. Larger, more efficient, complex parachute systems are needed. Several failures have hit the industry over the last few years, including SpaceX Crew Dragon, ESA ExoMars, Boeing CST-100, and the NASA Orion to name a few.
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ESA Grounds ExoMars
by Bill D'Zio | March 26, 2020 | Beyond Earth Orbit, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
COVID19 Impact Part II – SpaceX , SLS and NASA
by Bill D'Zio | March 25, 2020 | All space related, Launch, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
Part 2 of the Life in Space with COVID19 we will delve into Crew demo-2 where NASA and SpaceX are planning a launch within two months. There are a lot of pre-launch milestones and activities to cover to ensure a safe flight for the Astronauts. If anything goes wrong, there are lives at stake. Now NASA and SpaceX have to contend with another potential setback, COVID19 pandemic.
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Japan to launch last ISS resupply mission
by Bill D'Zio | March 25, 2020 | All space related, Launch | 0 Comments
Japan is one of three nations with the ability to launch resupply materials to the International Space Station. Japan’s 9th and final launch of the HTV is scheduled to take place on May 21, science minister Koichi Hagiuda said Tuesday.
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Coronavirus Pandemic Impact on Space Programs Part I
by Bill D'Zio | March 24, 2020 | All space related, Space Agencies | 0 Comments
With the launch window for NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover opening in a little less than four months, there are nearly daily pre-launch milestones to complete the rover pre flight activities at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Tight schedules on complex missions usually do not mix well. Now NASA has to contend with another challenge. COVID19.
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Final NASA Seats on Soyuz in 2020
by Bill D'Zio | March 22, 2020 | All space related, Stuff in Orbit | 0 Comments
NASA has been dependent on Russia for transport to and from the ISS. Over time the cost of seats on the Soyuz crew vehicle have risen.
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437 days 18 hours Longest Duration in Space
by Bill D'Zio | March 18, 2020 | All space related, Stuff in Orbit | 2 Comments
Since 1995 there has been a record that has stood the test of time and space. Valeri Vladimirovich Polyakov a Russian cosmonaut logged 437 days and 18 hours in space.
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China Long March 7A fails
by Bill D'Zio | March 16, 2020 | Launch | 0 Comments
The Long March 7A rocket lifted off at 9:34 p.m. Beijing Time from the Wenchang Space Launch Center on the coast of south China’s Hainan Province. A malfunction occurred some time after lift off which Xinhua reported Chinese space engineers will investigate the cause of the failure.
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Falcon 9 Beware of The Ides of March err disregard.
by Bill D'Zio | March 16, 2020 | Launch | 2 Comments
On Sunday, March 15 the Ides of March, SpaceX stood down from its launch attempt of Starlink satellites.
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Satellite 2020
by Blaine Curcio | March 15, 2020 | Space Money | 0 Comments
As an American living in China for most of the past 8 years, there have been two reasons to come home every year: Christmas, and the SATELLITE Conference in Washington DC.
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Pi Space
by Bill D'Zio | March 13, 2020 | Beyond Earth Orbit | 3 Comments
Pi π Day is March 14. How does Pi apply to Space?
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Reflections of 2020 Satellite Elon Musk
by Blaine Curcio | March 12, 2020 | Beyond Earth Orbit | 0 Comments
I was very much looking forward to watching the Elon Musk keynote at SATELLITE 2020. What would it be like to watch Elon Musk speak? It was, in a word, mind-blowing. Incredible. Thought-provoking. Inspiring. Annoying. But, at the end, Elon Musk certainly did not disappoint. What were the takeaways?
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3 Things About March 6 SpaceX Launch
by Bill D'Zio | March 11, 2020 | Launch, Uncategorized | 0 Comments
A SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft is on its way to the International Space Station. The spacecraft launched at 11:50 p.m. EST Friday. The Dragon Cargo spacecraft will deliver about 4,500 pounds of cargo and science investigations, including a new science facility scheduled to be installed to the outside of the station during a spacewalk this spring.
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