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Launch Services Procurement: How Buyers Choose Rockets, Rideshares, and Mission Assurance Partners
Launch procurement looks glamorous from the outside. It is usually less romantic from the buyer's side. The real questions begin with orbit, schedule, payload constraints, export controls, insurance, licensing, mission assurance, and who carries the consequence if something slips. By the time a satellite operator compares rockets, much of the decision space is already narrowed by mission reality.
A History of Space Debris Impacts on the ISS and ISS Conjunction Avoidance Actions
The International Space Station has lived in a hostile debris environment for most of its working life. Not every threat arrives in the form that makes headlines. The widely reported episodes involve a tracked object, a close approach forecast, a calculated probability, and a burn to move the station out of danger. The more persistent story is quieter. It is written into chipped windows, torn thermal blankets, cratered handrails, damaged radiator surfaces, and the occasional strike on visible hardware such as Canadarm2.
The CLPS Vendor Ecosystem: Which Companies Are Selling Into Lunar Delivery
The lunar economy is often discussed in broad and speculative terms. The part that is easiest to verify is narrower and more concrete. NASA created a recurring procurement path for commercial lunar delivery through Commercial Lunar Payload Services, usually shortened to CLPS. That single decision changed the structure of the market. Instead of building every mission internally, NASA began buying lunar transportation as a service from U.S. companies.
How Satellite Communications Support Aviation, Maritime, and Defense Customers
A fixed office can often fall back on fiber, cable, or mobile broadband. An aircraft crossing an ocean, a ship in the South Atlantic, a convoy in a remote border zone, or a patrol aircraft over open water cannot rely on those same options. The network has to follow the platform. That is the commercial and operational setting in which satellite communications became indispensable.
The New Market for Dual-Use Space Technology
A propulsion system that can serve a civil mission and a defense payload. A sensor useful for wildfire monitoring and intelligence collection. A communications architecture that supports both enterprise operations and military resilience. These are dual-use space technologies. The phrase sounds broad, but the commercial logic is simple. One technological base serves more than one customer class.
Lunar Communications, Navigation, and Power as Commercial Infrastructure Markets
A one-off lunar mission can tolerate a great deal of bespoke support. A sustained lunar presence cannot. Once planners begin talking about repeated deliveries, surface mobility, scientific operations at scale, resource work, and eventually human activity over longer periods, communications, navigation, and power stop being background engineering topics. They become infrastructure markets.
How Satellite Services Support Smart Airports, Shipping, and Logistics Hubs
Airports, ports, and logistics hubs are often described as local infrastructure. In reality they depend on systems that stretch far beyond the physical site. Aircraft approach from across continents and oceans. Ships arrive from global routes. Trucks, rail assets, and warehouses depend on upstream conditions the local operator does not directly control. This is why satellite services are becoming more relevant to smart-hub planning.
Frontier Technologies of the Space Industry as of 2026
On January 11, 2026, two orbital data center nodes launched to low Earth orbit, while companies building the hardware to lift such payloads kept refining reusable systems rather than treating reuse as a side experiment. That pairing says a lot about 2026. The frontier is no longer just whether a rocket can reach orbit. The frontier is whether the transport system can support regular industrial activity with enough cadence, margin, and cost discipline to make entirely new businesses possible.
How Governments Buy Commercial Earth Observation Data
A government agency rarely starts by asking whether it wants to support a commercial space company. It starts with a mission problem. Weather forecasts need more observations. Emergency managers need quicker flood mapping. Environmental teams want broader coverage. Civil agencies want more frequent imagery without waiting for a new state satellite system. Defense and security bodies may want added capacity, wider revisit, or lower-cost access to a data stream that already exists in the market.
Ground Stations as a Service: The Quiet Infrastructure Behind the Space Economy
A spacecraft can be perfectly built, launched on time, and placed in the right orbit, yet still deliver little value if the operator cannot command it, receive data, and process that data into a useful workflow. This is why the ground segment matters so much. It is the part of the space system that turns an orbiting asset into an operating service.
SPARTA Countermeasures: The Complete Guide to Defending Spacecraft from Cyber and Counterspace Threats
The 2022 cyberattack against the Viasat KA-SAT satellite network knocked tens of thousands of modems offline across Europe in the hours before Russia's invasion of Ukraine, disrupting communications for military and civilian users simultaneously. The incident was a clear demonstration that space systems are not insulated from state-level cyberattacks, and that the consequences of a successful breach extend well beyond the spacecraft itself. When space system engineers and security professionals tried to discuss what went wrong and what defenses could have helped, they encountered a persistent problem: there was no shared, unclassified vocabulary for talking about space system defenses with the same specificity as the attacks.
The SPARTA Matrix: A Complete Guide to Space System Attack Tactics, Techniques, and Sub-Techniques
On March 11, 2026, The Aerospace Corporation released version 3.2 of the Space Attack Research and Tactic Analysis (SPARTA) matrix, updating a framework that had quietly become one of the most consequential documents in commercial and government space security. SPARTA didn't emerge from a theoretical exercise. It was built to solve a specific, practical problem: the space industry had no shared, unclassified vocabulary for discussing how satellites and their supporting systems could be attacked. Without a common language, engineers at different organizations talked past each other. Threat briefings from government agencies often relied on classified channels, leaving commercial operators without the context they needed to build secure systems. SPARTA changed that.
Disaggregated Satellite Systems: Architecture of the Processing Core, Sensor Modules, and Operational Rollout
The first commercially available synthetic aperture radar small satellite, ICEYE-X1, launched in January 2018 with a 3.25-metre deployable antenna folded into a microsatellite chassis. That engineering feat required every subsystem on board to share the same power budget, the same thermal envelope, the same attitude control system, and the same structural frame. If the radar antenna needed more power, the onboard computer got less. If the optical communications terminal required a clear field of view, the radar beam geometry had to accommodate it. Everything was a trade-off, and every trade-off was permanent from the moment the rocket left the launch pad.
Satellite Stealth Methods Market Analysis 2026
On February 28, 1990, Space Shuttle Atlantis launched a payload long associated in open sources with the U.S. Mistyprogram. Public reporting and declassified-era analysis tied that effort to a spacecraft intended to reduce radar, visible, infrared, and laser signatures, and later open reporting described a second launch in 1999 plus the apparent release of a decoy object to complicate tracking.
Artemis III: NASA’s Pivotal Low-Earth Orbit Test – Preparing for Humanity’s Return to the...
Following the triumphant success of Artemis II in April 2026, NASA has refined its Artemis architecture to prioritize safety and reliability. What was once envisioned as the program’s first crewed lunar landing has evolved: Artemis III, now scheduled for mid-2027, will serve as a critical demonstration mission in low Earth orbit (LEO). This test will validate the integration of the Orion spacecraft with one or both commercial Human Landing Systems (HLS) from SpaceX and Blue Origin, setting the stage for the first Artemis lunar landing on Artemis IV in early 2028.















