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Artemis II Mission Schedule From Launch to Splashdown as of April 2, 2026

As of April 2, 2026, Artemis II is no longer a paper mission, a rehearsal date, or a shifting campaign target. NASAlaunched the mission from Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center at 6:35 p.m. EDT on April 1, carrying Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen aboard Orion on an approximately 10 day mission around the Moon and back. By the morning of April 2, Orion had already completed its perigee raise burn and was in the high Earth orbit that sets up the departure toward the Moon. NASA scheduled the translunar injection burn for 7:49 p.m. EDT on April 2, pending approval from the mission management team, and the agency’s current public schedule still points to a planned Pacific splashdown at 8:06 p.m. EDT on April 10.

Labor, Speed, and Pressure: The Human Cost of Moving Fast in the Space Industry

The public image of SpaceX is built on flight footage and manufacturing speed. It is boosters landing on drone ships, capsules docking with the station, rockets rising from Florida and Texas, and giant stainless steel stages assembled under floodlights. That imagery tells only part of the truth. Beneath it sits a labor system that asks a great deal from workers and has drawn scrutiny over injury rates, management pressure, and the treatment of internal dissent. For years that human cost remained easier to overlook because the technical results were so visible and because much of the space sector admired the pace.

Private Control of Space Infrastructure: Should One Company Have This Much Influence?

The question of private control in space used to sound theoretical, almost philosophical. Should essential infrastructure beyond Earth really sit inside corporations rather than states? That question is no longer abstract. SpaceX now influences launch access, commercial broadband in orbit, parts of defense and intelligence planning, crew transport dependence for NASA, and emerging ideas about how orbital services might function in the future. This is not a niche role. It is infrastructural power exercised by a private company in full public view.

The Military Ratchet: Why Commercial Space Infrastructure Has Become an Undeclared Theater of Great-Power...

An hour before Russian forces crossed into Ukraine on February 24, 2022, a sophisticated cyberattack disabled the ground infrastructure of Viasat's KA-SAT satellite network. The attack disrupted communications across Ukraine and cascaded across Europe, knocking out tens of thousands of modems in Germany and other NATO member states. Ukrainian military and government communications, which depended on KA-SAT, went down at the moment of invasion.

NASA Details Issues Encountered During Artemis II Launch

NASA’s Artemis II mission, the first crewed flight of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft, lifted off successfully from Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Complex 39B on April 1, 2026, at approximately 6:35 p.m. EDT. The four astronauts aboard - Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen - are now en route for a 10-day lunar flyby, marking America’s return to crewed lunar missions after more than 50 years.

Space Traffic Management: Emerging Market or Government Burden in Disguise?

Space traffic management sounds like the kind of category venture investors should love. It sits on top of a visible bottleneck, it benefits from rising launch activity, and it offers the promise of software, data, automation, and recurring subscriptions rather than one-off hardware sales. Yet the closer the market is examined in 2026, the less it looks like a normal commercial category and the more it looks like a public-safety burden being partially outsourced to private specialists. The need is real. The congestion is real. The buyer problem is real. The part that remains stubbornly unclear is whether the core service can be commercialized on ordinary terms or whether it is fated to become basic infrastructure that governments provide, subsidize, or coordinate because nobody else can credibly do the whole job.

Launch Delays, Supplier Bottlenecks, and the Real Cost of Just-in-Time Space Manufacturing

The phrase just-in-time manufacturing sounds efficient because it promises discipline. Inventory stays low, warehouses stay smaller, and capital is not tied up in parts that sit on shelves waiting for an uncertain future. In consumer electronics, automotive assembly, and other high-volume industries, that logic can be persuasive. In the space sector, it becomes dangerous the moment the supply chain reaches parts that are hard to qualify, hard to replace, or hard to ship into an integration flow that already runs on a narrow clock.

National Security or Protectionism? The Debate Over Domestic-Only Space Supply Chains

“Buy domestic” sounds clean because it turns a messy industrial problem into a moral one. A country either supports its own firms or it does not. In the space sector, that framing breaks down almost at once. A launch vehicle assembled in the United States can depend on machine tools from Japan, software built by a supplier with teams across Europe, specialty chemicals refined in South Korea, and test equipment whose deepest parts chain back to producers spread across more than one allied market. A satellite sold as domestic can still contain sensors, semiconductors, optical coatings, connectors, memory, and manufacturing equipment that come from a much larger industrial web.

Single-Source Suppliers and Hidden Fragility in the Space Economy

A launch vehicle can survive public criticism, redesigns, and even a delayed payload manifest. It usually can't survive a missing valve, a late batch of qualified electronics, or a gas supply problem that looks trivial until the test schedule slips by months. That is where the argument about single-source suppliers starts, and where the public conversation usually stops too early.

How Iran’s Oil Flow Blockade Is Expected to Reshape the U.S. Space Industry

What has happened in the Strait of Hormuz is not just another oil-market scare. As of April 1, 2026, the flow of energy through the chokepoint has been severely disrupted by Iran after the regional war that began on February 28, 2026, and Reuters reporting on the IEA’s assessment has described the result as the largest oil supply disruption in history. Traffic has not vanished in a perfectly sealed naval cordon, yet the volume loss is large enough that global oil, fuel, freight, and industrial input prices are already moving in the same direction.

The Ethics of Buying Space Hardware from Geopolitical Rivals

In March 2026, the Aerospace Industries Association and PwC warned that U.S. space demand is rising faster than supplier capacity, while the Office of Space Commerce and NASA are now running a civil space industrial base assessment to understand where those dependencies sit. Those are not abstract policy exercises. They are late responses to decisions made over years, and many of those decisions treated hardware sourcing as a pricing question when it was also a political and moral one.

SpaceX Launch Cadence and Reusability Dominance

SpaceX introduced the idea of landing and reflying orbital class rockets more than a decade ago when most experts viewed the concept as impractical. The company began with Falcon 9 prototypes that returned to Earth under controlled propulsion. Early attempts in the 2010s ended in explosions on the pad or ocean splashes. Each failure supplied data that refined grid fins landing legs and engine software. By 2017 the first reused booster flew again on a commercial mission. That single event shifted perceptions across the space sector.

NASA on Amazon: Books and Prime Video Across Every Era of Space Exploration

NASA was formally established on July 29, 1958 under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, created in the urgent aftermath of the Soviet Union's Sputnik launch in October 1957. The agency inherited facilities, personnel, and ambitions from the older National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics and almost immediately began preparing for something far more audacious than aeronautical research. Within a decade, it had sent human beings to the surface of another world.

The U.S. Space Economy: Quantifying Contributions to GDP, Employment, and Policy Momentum

The U.S. space economy represents a dynamic and increasingly measurable sector that blends government investment, private innovation, and widespread industrial spillovers. Unlike traditional industry statistics, which often bury space-related activities within broader categories like aerospace manufacturing or telecommunications, dedicated efforts by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) have created a specialized “Space Economy Satellite Account” (SESA). This framework provides consistent, comparable data on the sector’s contributions to gross domestic product (GDP), gross output, private employment, and compensation - allowing analysts to benchmark space against other parts of the U.S. economy.

Apollo 8 From Liftoff to Splashdown

At 7:51 a.m. Eastern Standard Time on December 21, 1968, Apollo 8 rose from Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center with three men aboard: Frank Borman, James Lovell, and William Anders. The rocket was Saturn V AS-503, the first Saturn V ever trusted with a crew. That single fact often gets lost because Apollo 11 became the better-known mission, yet Apollo 8 asked for a staggering amount of confidence from NASA in December 1968.

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