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How the Artemis II Orion Capsule Maintains Communications With NASA

When Artemis II lifted off from Kennedy Space Center on April 1, 2026, it carried four people farther from Earth than any human crew had traveled in more than 50 years. Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen began a 10-day free-return trajectory around the Moon aboard Orion, a capsule built by Lockheed Martin and designed specifically to operate in deep space where there are no GPS satellites and no commercial relay networks. Keeping that crew connected to NASA's Mission Control Centerat Johnson Space Center in Houston required a layered, redundant communications architecture that draws on six decades of spaceflight engineering.

How the Artemis II Orion Spacecraft Finds Its Way from Earth to the Moon...

On April 1, 2026, NASA's Space Launch System rocket lifted off from Launch Pad 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 6:35 p.m. EDT, sending four astronauts on the first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17 in December 1972. The crew, named Integrity by the astronauts aboard, consists of NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch, along with Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen. What makes this flight remarkable is not simply that it goes to the Moon. It's that getting there and coming back requires a layered navigation architecture that combines hardware on the spacecraft, radio dishes on three continents, and orbital mechanics so well understood that the physics themselves serve as a safety net.

The Artemis II Orion Toilet Troubles: A Deep-Space Plumbing Drama Unfolds

When NASA’s Artemis II mission launched on April 1, 2026, carrying four astronauts - Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen - on the first crewed flight of the Orion spacecraft beyond low-Earth orbit in over 50 years, the crew had one shiny new piece of hardware they were particularly eager to use: the Universal Waste Management System (UWMS), a $23–30 million advanced space toilet installed in a private hygiene bay.

Rare Earth Elements: What They Are, Where They Come From, and Why the World...

The phrase "rare earth elements" is one of the more misleading terms in materials science. These 17 metallic elements are not particularly scarce in the Earth's crust. Cerium, one of the most common among them, is roughly as abundant as copper. Neodymium outstrips lead in average crustal concentration. What makes them functionally rare is that economically minable concentrations are uncommon, and once ore is extracted, separating individual elements from one another requires chemistry so complex and infrastructure so capital-intensive that most countries have never bothered to build it.

Cislunar Space: The New Frontier Between Earth and the Moon

There's a word that has quietly taken over the vocabulary of space agencies, defense planners, and venture capitalists alike: cislunar. It sounds technical, even obscure. But the concept it describes is both straightforward and enormously consequential.

Reusability and Reality: Does SpaceX Lower Costs for Everyone or Just Strengthen Its Lead?

The public story about reusable rockets is simple and mostly flattering. SpaceX proved that orbital-class booster recovery could work, then used it to reduce launch prices, increase cadence, and normalize a level of operational repetition that earlier launch markets struggled to imagine. Much of that story is true. It captures why reusability is one of the most important technical and business shifts in the history of launch.

Axiom Space Company Profile: Building the World’s First Commercial Space Station

Axiom Space was established in 2016 by two individuals whose careers had been defined by the International Space Station. Dr. Kam Ghaffarian had previously founded Stinger Ghaffarian Technologies, Inc., which grew into NASA's second-largest engineering services contractor, responsible for training NASA astronauts and managing operations aboard the ISS. That company was eventually acquired by KBR, Inc. in 2018. Michael Suffredini, the other co-founder, had served as NASA's ISS Program Manager from 2005 to 2015, guiding the station through its critical transition from construction to full operational and commercial use.

Orbital Data Centers: Real Business Opportunity or Speculative Fantasy?

The phrase orbital data center is being used for at least two different businesses, and the confusion between them is doing much of the selling. One version is small, narrow, and already real: computers in orbit that process data for satellites, space stations, remote sensing payloads, and government users before information is sent to the ground. The other version is far larger and far noisier: solar-powered constellations in low Earth orbit that would one day compete with or supplement terrestrial hyperscale data centers for artificial intelligence workloads. Those are not the same market. They do not require the same capital, the same launch rate, the same thermal design, or the same customer base. Treating them as one industry makes the whole segment look more mature than it is.

The Environmental Debate Around Starship: Progress, Pollution, and Tradeoffs

Arguments about Starship are usually framed around performance, schedule, lunar plans, Mars rhetoric, and the visible drama of test flights. Yet one of the most enduring questions sits in a different place. What ecological price should be accepted for a launch system that promises scale, reuse, and heavy transport capability beyond anything now flying? That question is not anti-space, anti-technology, or anti-growth by default. It is the kind of question that any major industrial system should face when it expands near sensitive habitat, public coastline, and densely used launch regions.

Should Governments Block Foreign Components in Space Systems?

A blanket ban on foreign components in space systems would feel decisive and fail in practice. It would raise costs, lengthen schedules, shrink supplier choice, and still leave governments exposed to the very dependencies that matter most, because the hardest vulnerabilities in space hardware rarely sit in the obvious places. They sit in propulsion, flight computers, radiation-hardened semiconductors, secure communications modules, crypto, power electronics, star trackers, satellite software toolchains, and a short list of specialty materials and processes that can’t be swapped out on short notice.

Asteroid Mining and Ownership: Can Anyone Really Claim Space Resources?

The first striking fact about asteroid mining is how little mining has happened. No company has yet extracted material from an asteroid, processed it, and sold it in a functioning commercial chain. Yet legal arguments over ownership, licensing, and rights over future material are already advanced enough to shape investment pitches and diplomatic alignments. The politics began before the industry did.

Spectrum Wars in Space: The Growing Battle Over Frequencies, Satellites, and Market Access

The public sees rockets, landers, and satellites. The industry sees filings, coordination deadlines, technical studies, and interference claims. That hidden layer now shapes the space economy almost as much as launch itself. In some markets it shapes it more. A constellation can be well financed, technically credible, and strongly demanded by customers, yet still be slowed or boxed by spectrum access problems that ordinary users never notice until service slips.

How Do Satellites Determine Their Orbital Position?

Satellites don't float around passively hoping someone notices them. Every operational spacecraft in Earth orbit is tracked, monitored, and often self-reporting its position through a combination of systems designed from the ground up to answer one deceptively simple question: where is this thing, exactly?

Conflict, Control, and Satellites: The Military Importance of Space Access

On 15 November 2021, Russia destroyed one of its own satellites, Cosmos 1408, with a direct-ascent anti-satellite weapon. The event scattered debris across heavily used orbital bands and forced emergency reactions by other spacecraft operators. It also did something else that mattered far more than the headline phrase “space debris” suggested. It demonstrated, in a single act, that military advantage in space does not depend only on what is placed in orbit. It also depends on who can threaten that access from Earth, who can absorb the disruption, and who can recover faster.

The Monopoly Above Earth: Are a Few Companies Taking Over Orbital Infrastructure?

The word monopoly makes people defensive because it sounds like a final verdict. In space markets, the more accurate problem is structural concentration. A handful of firms now dominate the most important orbital layers: launch, satellite broadband, tactical imagery, and the software-and-ground systems that turn spacecraft into services. Waiting for a textbook monopoly before acting would miss how infrastructure markets actually harden.

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