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How Old Is the Universe?
The universe doesn't have a birth certificate, but it does have a speedometer. Measuring how fast everything is moving away from everything else allows researchers to rewind the clock to the moment it all started. This concept relies on the Hubble-Lemaître law , which describes the observation that galaxies move away from Earth at speeds proportional to their distance. If a galaxy is twice as far away, it moves twice as fast.
Fever Dreams: On Demand Launch, Daily Launches, Responsive Space
On demand launch has a clean sound to it. It suggests a world where a customer notices a gap in orbit, calls a launch provider, trucks a rocket to a pad, and flies within hours. Daily launches pushes the same image even further. It turns space access into something that looks less like a national event and more like package logistics. Responsive space sits beside those phrases, and sometimes gets treated as a synonym. That is where the confusion starts.
New Glenn vs. Nova
On November 13, 2025, the Florida sky was split by a pillar of fire. The 321-foot-tall New Glenn rocket, a machine a decade in the making, climbed from the historic Launch Complex 36 at Cape Canaveral, pushing against the Earth with over 3.8 million pounds of thrust. Its cargo was NASA's twin ESCAPADE spacecraft, two probes destined for a long, looping journey to Mars. For Blue Origin, the secretive and methodical company founded by Jeff Bezos, this launch was a moment of profound consequence.
A Detailed Review of Entry, Descent, and Landing Techniques and Technologies
A spacecraft arrives fast, hot, and badly out of place.
NASA Studies Human Stasis Pods for Travel to Mars
The attached document is a NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts Phase I final study by SpaceWorks Enterprises on a torpor-inducing transfer habitat for human travel to Mars. It was written during a period when NASA was still using the 2009 Design Reference Architecture 5.0 as a public benchmark for crewed Mars planning, and it asked a direct engineering question: what happens to a Mars mission if the crew does not spend the transit months living, eating, exercising, and moving around in the usual way?
Immortality and Deep Space Exploration: Why Human Longevity May Determine Whether We Reach the...
Alpha Centauri, the closest star system to our own, is 4.37 light-years away. NASA's Voyager 1, the fastest human-made object ever to leave the solar system, travels at roughly 17 kilometers per second. At that speed, it would take approximately 73,000 years to reach Alpha Centauri. Not decades. Not centuries. Seventy-three thousand years.
What Happened When ESA Simulated a Mission to Mars on Earth
The MARS500 project was a ground simulation of a crewed mission to Mars carried out from 2007 to 2011 at the Institute of Biomedical Problems in Moscow. It was organized principally by the Russian institute with major participation from ESA and support from Chinese partners. The most famous phase began on 3 June 2010 and ended on 4 November 2011, when six men emerged after 520 days inside a linked set of sealed modules that were built to mimic the internal logic of a Mars transfer craft, a landing vehicle, and a small surface outpost.
Stasis Pods and Deep Space Exploration
Space is big. Not "long road trip" big or "Pacific Ocean" big, but big in a way that makes Earth's entire surface look like a parking space. The distance from Earth to Mars at its closest approach runs roughly 54.6 million kilometers, and even at the speed of the Parker Solar Probe , a crewed mission using conventional chemical propulsion would take between six and nine months one way.
Europe’s RLV C5 Heavy Lift Launch Vehicle
SpaceX has fundamentally altered the expectations for reaching orbit through the development of its Starshipprogram. The sheer scale of the vehicle, standing 121 meters tall in its initial version, makes previous heavy-lifters look diminutive. It isn't just about size; the goal is to create a system that can be flown, landed, and reflown with the same ease as a commercial airliner. While the aerospace industry has long discussed full reusability, the flight tests conducted at the Starbase facility in Texas have turned those theoretical discussions into observable data.
Report: NASA’s Management of the Human Landing System Contracts
NASA has spent years presenting Artemis as the program that will return astronauts to the Moon and then keep them there often enough to build lasting operational experience. The NASA Office of Inspector General audit examines the part of that campaign with the least room for failure: the Human Landing System , or HLS. That is the vehicle class that must carry astronauts from lunar orbit to the surface, support them during their stay, and return them safely to orbit. The audit is not a broad reflection on Artemis politics. It is a focused assessment of contracts, management structure, technical progress, and crew safety.
What the Moon Rocks Were Hiding
When the Apollo astronauts returned from the Moon, they brought back something more valuable than any treasure, 382 kilograms of Moon rock that would keep scientists busy for generations. For decades those samples have been scrutinised, measured, and debated and, for decades one question has refused to be satisfactorily answered… Did the Moon once have a powerful magnetic field or was it always magnetically feeble?
The WMO OSCAR Database: How the World Tracks Its Weather-Watching Machines
Somewhere in Geneva, a meteorologist is trying to figure out whether the current constellation of geostationary satellites can meet the observation requirements for high-resolution numerical weather prediction over the next decade. The question isn't simple. It involves not just which satellites are up there, but what those satellites can actually measure, how accurately, at what temporal frequency, over which vertical layers of the atmosphere, and whether those capabilities match the quantified standards that weather forecasting experts have determined are needed to produce useful forecasts.
The CEOS Database: The World’s Official Catalogue of Earth Observation Satellites
There's a website that most people outside the space industry have never heard of, yet it quietly underpins some of the most consequential decisions in global environmental science, climate policy, and satellite mission planning. That website is the CEOS Database , housed at database.eohandbook.com, and it serves as the world's only official, consolidated record of civil Earth observation satellite missions, the instruments those missions carry, and the measurements those instruments make.
eoPortal: The World’s Most Complete Reference for Earth Observation Satellite Missions
There are thousands of satellites orbiting Earth at any given moment, each one collecting data on weather systems, ice sheets, agricultural land, atmospheric gases, ocean temperatures, and everything in between. Keeping track of all of them, their instruments, their orbital parameters, their launch histories, and their scientific objectives, is not a task that falls to any single government or agency. That coordination work, much of it invisible to the public, is partly what eoPortal exists to do.
What is the New Space Economy Publishing Platform, and Why Is It Important?
New Space Economy does not present itself as a narrow niche blog or a conventional trade magazine. It operates more like a large independent publishing platform built around the idea that the space economy is not a single industry, but a connected system of launch services, satellite infrastructure, government programs, defense activity, market development, science, communications, and public interest. That broader frame shows up immediately in the site's organization. It publishes current news, long-form analysis, explainers, sector profiles, FAQ material, and topic pages that span everything from Low Earth orbit to commercial launch pricing to science fiction media.















