Space

By Irene Klotz, Mark Carreau
NASA stops work on lunar lander a second time after losing bidder files federal lawsuit.
Program Management

By Graham Warwick
Our roundup of the main aerospace and defense stories making the news this week.
Aerospace

By Jen DiMascio
Two experimental satellites built for the Space Development Agency are “tumbling” in orbit, the agency director said.
Space

By Jen DiMascio, Irene Klotz, Guy Norris
NASA’s Space Launch System and Orion are big-government programs trying to keep pace in a marketplace increasingly dominated by commercial industry, meanwhile, the U.S. military is looking to build bridges to international partners, that same commercial industry and to the intelligence community.
Space

By Guy Norris
Sierra Space is in discussions with the European Space Agency and German aerospace center DLR to extend existing partnerships covering crew access to the International Space Station to include new commercial vehicles.
Commercial Space

By Graham Warwick
Startup Dawn Aerospace has completed initial test flights of a reusable suborbital spaceplane demonstrator in New Zealand.
Commercial Space

By Mark Carreau
Blue Origin’s reusable New Shepard suborbital rocket successfully boosted 19 experiments to the fringes of space on Aug. 26.
Commercial Space

By Jen DiMascio
U.S. Space Force, Space Command and the National Reconnaissance Office have signed a “protected defense” strategic framework to align their space warfighting efforts.
Space

By Graham Warwick
Aircraft and satellites are being used in a research campaign to measure methane being released as the permafrost thaws in regions north of the Arctic Circle.
Space

By Graham Warwick
Startup Astroscale’s ELSA-d orbital debris removal demonstration has accomplished its first key goal, with the servicer satellite showing how it would capture a defunct spacecraft.
Space

By Jen DiMascio
SpaceX seeks LOX; Missile warning force design; The start of Space Command; and A question of UAPs.
Space

By Guy Norris
Production of the first all-new and modernized RS-25 engines for NASA’s Space Launch System has begun in Aerojet Rocketdyne’s newly expanded Los Angeles manufacturing facility.
Space

By Guy Norris
Startup Firefly Aerospace says plans remain on schedule to attempt the first launch of its two-stage Alpha rocket from Vandenburg SFB, California, on Sept. 2 following a successful static fire test in mid-August.
Commercial Space

By Irene Klotz
With support from a NASA Tipping Point technology development award, Mojave, California-based Masten is developing a suborbital aerospace testbed with an option for point-to-point payload transportation.
Space

By Irene Klotz
SpaceX is encountering shortfalls of liquid oxygen due to increased demand for oxygen by hospitals caring for COVID-19 patients.
Commercial Space

By Jen DiMascio
U.S. Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall plans to begin working now to incorporate the Space Development Agency (SDA) into the U.S. Space Force, a bureaucratic transition not scheduled until Oct. 1, 2022.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Jen DiMascio
U.S. Space Command will now turn its focus to becoming fully operational and establishing a fully staffed and permanent headquarters.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Michael Bruno
A wave of newly minted publicly traded space companies is hitting the marketplace and sustaining investment confidence, hinting at more to come.
Commercial Space

By Irene Klotz
As rival SpaceX prepares for a tourist mission, Boeing is wrestling to pull off uncrewed flight test.
Space

By Maxim Pyadushkin
Russia has postponed its return to the Moon for almost a year.
Space

Anatoly Zak
The continued operation of Russia’s segment of the International Space Station depends on the replacement of nearly 1,500 pieces of onboard equipment, according to a key advisory group for Russian space agency Roscosmos.
Space

By Mark Carreau
A pinched nerve in the neck of NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei is the reason the agency has postponed his planned Aug. 24 spacewalk outside the International Space Station.
Space

By Mark Carreau
NASA plans to send a wide range of science and technology investigations to the International Space Station on an upcoming SpaceX resupply mission.
Commercial Space

By Jen DiMascio
Boeing Australia is hoping to leverage Boeing’s U.S. military satellite technologies as it competes with Airbus and Lockheed Martin to win a $3.5 billion contract to build Australia's next-generation military satellite communications system.
Space

By Irene Klotz
New satellite constellations seeding the $1 trillion space economy
Program Management