Space

Leithen Francis (Singapore), Amy Svitak (Paris)
With no takers among cash-strapped European governments, EADS Astrium is talking to Singapore about partnering on the GO-3S space surveillance system, a geostationary satellite that promises to be the first to transmit real-time video resolving objects as small as 3 meters (10 ft.) across.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
This gray powder from inside a Martian “mudstone” contains sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorous and carbon—all chemical ingredients for life as we know it on Earth and a major target of the $2.5 billion Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) mission. In a first for planetary science, the mission's nuclear-powered Curiosity rover drilled the hole at left, after a test run to the right, and transferred some of the powder to its internal chemistry labs.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
Unwieldy U.S. military procurement continues to hamper the use of hosted payloads as a time- and cost-saving way to put sensors and relays into orbit, even with a hosted UHF link serving troops and sailors in Afghanistan and the rest of the Indian Ocean region. That hosted payload on the Intelsat 22 bird belongs to the Australian Defense Force (ADF) and has worked well since its launch a year ago on a Proton. The ADF paid $167 million for the 18 UHF channels and had them up and running less than three years after it signed the contract.
Space

By Bradley Perrett
Partnerships aim to blunt new challenges from U.S., China
Space

The deficit-reduction measure that went into effect March 1 cuts 7.9% from discretionary defense spending and 5.3% from non-defense discretionary spending. Surely, Washington's latest manufactured crisis will not do any serious damage, will it? Well, consider this:

Amy Svitak (Naples, Italy, London and Brussels )
With a U.K. commitment to increase its European Space Agency contribution 25%, the space industry is becoming a major economic driver in Britain. The nation's £1.2 billion ($1.8 billion) pledge to ESA programs is part of a larger €10-billion ($13 billion) spending package the agency approved last November, making the U.K. the agency's third-largest funder—after France and Germany—and positioning Astrium U.K. to reap the benefits.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
It's been 10 years since the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) began its careful probe into the reasons NASA lost a second space shuttle. The late Sally Ride, a member of both the CAIB and the Rogers Commission set up after the first shuttle disaster, famously commented at the time that she heard an “echo of Challenger” in the loss of Columbia. Now many of the conditions that allowed the U.S.
Space

Michael Dumiak (Berlin)
In November, Comesep will debut its new space weather alert system
Space

Staff
Civil servants and contractors at NASA will have their wings clipped for the rest of the fiscal year by the automatic sequestration budget cuts that went into effect March 1, with sharp restrictions on travel to conferences and on training not considered essential to doing their jobs.
Space

Mark Carreau
DIYRockets is spearheading an creation of 3D-printed rocket engines
Space

Mark Carreau
Cerebrotech Medical Systems Inc. hopes to develop a non-invasive sensor to monitor brain fluid changes believed responsible for vision changes detected in astronauts assigned to long-duration missions aboard the International Space Station.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
AIR LAUNCH: A Payerne, Switzerland-based startup has joined with France’s Dassault, the European Space Agency and others to propose an air-launched, reusable, unpiloted space shuttle optimized for launching small satellites at low cost. Swiss Space Systems plans to use a vehicle based on Dassault Aviation’s Vehra airborne reusable hypersonic vehicle concept, and a throwaway upper stage, to orbit satellites weighing as much as 250 kg at altitudes of 600-800 km.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
'Career civil servants' report lax security practices at NASA
Space

Mark Carreau
Examined spacecraft reusability and on-orbit assembly options
Space

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING — Development of two major derivatives of the DFH-4 satellite bus of Chinese spacecraft builder CAST is running ahead of work on the state manufacturer’s larger DFH-5 product, says a sibling marketing company.
Space

Michael Dumiak
BERLIN — Researchers at more than half a dozen European space institutes are working to build better tools to forecast the space weather patterns produced by the Earth’s Sun. Space weather events such as solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) create streams of energetic particles that can adversely affect astronaut health, satellite operations and terrestrial power grids.
Space

By Guy Norris
LOS ANGELES — Virgin Galactic says a series of final confirmation hot-fire tests of SpaceShipTwo’s RM2 hybrid rocket are under way at Mojave, Calif., in preparation for the start of powered test flights of its suborbital passenger vehicle.
Space

By Guy Norris
Vertical takeoff and landing test vehicle reached almost 263 ft.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
Says contractors who employ foreign workers must comply with laws
Space

Mark Carreau
Robust U.S. public support for the human exploration of Mars reflected in Explore Mars’s recent Mars Generation poll has probably not been changed by the subsequent spectacular explosion of a small asteroid over Russia, according to the national survey’s principal advocate.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.) has new whistleblower information of possible technology leaks from NASA to China, this time at Langley Research Center, and is seeking a federal criminal investigation of the charges.
Space

Mark Carreau
Robot arm removal of grapple bars completed de-stowing
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
Wolf is chair of the House Appropriations subcommittee that funds NASA

Mark Carreau
Wyle Laboratories Inc., of Houston, will provide medical and biomedical support for a wide range of NASA human space exploration and research initiatives under a potential 10-year, $1.76 billion contract award announced March 4. The Human Health and Performance contract, which includes Lockheed Martin Services Inc., of Gaithersburg, Md., as a major subcontractor, is effective May 1. The agreement includes a five-year base period and options for extensions through 2023.
Space

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — Astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) were well into the unpacking of the SpaceX Dragon resupply capsule on March 4, after the mission successfully overcame post-launch thruster difficulties that delayed the rendezvous and berthing by a day. Station commander Kevin Ford, assisted by flight engineer Tom Marsburn, grappled the second SpaceX Dragon supply vessel with Canada’s 58-ft.-long robot arm on March 3 at 5:31 a.m. EST.
Space