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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.

SpaceX Confidentially Files for IPO: Historic June Listing Targets $1.75 Trillion Valuation and Record...

In a move that marks one of the most anticipated milestones in private-market history, Elon Musk’s SpaceX has confidentially filed draft registration papers with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for an initial public offering (IPO). The filing, reported today by Bloomberg, Reuters, The Wall Street Journal, and other outlets citing people familiar with the matter, puts the rocket, satellite, and now AI-integrated company on track for a potential public debut as early as June 2026.

NASA’s Artemis II Launches Successfully: Humans Return to Deep Space After More Than 50...

As of April 1, 2026, at approximately 7 PM EDT, NASA’s Artemis II mission has lifted off from Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The Space Launch System (SLS) rocket carrying the Orion spacecraft and its four-person crew successfully departed at 6:35 p.m. EDT (22:35 UTC), marking the first crewed lunar mission since Apollo 17 in December 1972.

Explosive Potential of a Fully Fueled Launch Vehicle and What an On-Pad Explosion Can...

A fully fueled rocket on a launchpad is not a bomb in the classic sense. It is a tall, thin structure full of cryogenic liquids, pressurized gases, plumbing, valves, control systems, and thin-walled tanks that are designed to keep fuel and oxidizer apart until combustion happens inside engines.

Who Really Controls the Space Supply Chain?

The most powerful actor in the space supply chain is rarely the company that gets the headlines. Public attention settles on launch providers, satellite prime contractors, and the founders attached to them, but the harder truth sits underneath that surface layer. The terms of access are usually set by governments, by a thin tier of merchant suppliers with hard-to-replace capabilities, and by the physical bottlenecks attached to minerals, microelectronics, propellants, testing, and certification.

Who Owns the Moon’s Water? The Coming Legal War Over Lunar Resource Extraction Rights

The Moon is not short of interesting materials. It has uranium, potassium, phosphorus, platinum-group metals, and helium-3, an isotope of helium so rare on Earth that it exists there in meaningful quantities only as a byproduct of tritium decay in nuclear weapons programs. Helium-3 can theoretically serve as fuel for nuclear fusion reactions that would produce far less radioactive waste than conventional fission power. Seattle-based startup Interlune, working with Iowa industrial manufacturer Vermeer, has been developing an electric lunar excavator designed to extract helium-3, with a prototype capable of processing up to 100 metric tons of lunar soil per hour. The company has announced plans for a 2027 mission to confirm helium-3 concentrations before deploying a pilot plant in 2029.

How Successful Space Businesses Identify Risk and Strengthen Resilience

The first question is what can end the company. In a space business, that answer is rarely a single rocket explosion, a single bad satellite, or a single licensing delay taken by itself. The events that usually do the lasting damage sit closer to cash, contracts, debt, execution cadence, and the gap between a technical promise and a paying market. That is why the strongest firms in the sector treat risk identification as a test of corporate survival rather than a catalogue of technical hazards. They sort risks into two piles early: the ones that can be absorbed, and the ones that can break financing, stop deliveries, or destroy customer trust. Rocket Lab’s full-year 2025 financial results are a good example of how management frames that problem in practice.

Horizon Scanning for Competitive Advantage in the Space Industry

Most strategic planning in the space industry concentrates on the things that are already happening: launch schedules, contract awards, constellation buildout, regulatory filings. These are the visible facts that populate quarterly briefings and investor decks. The problem is that by the time a trend shows up in an earnings call or a government budget line, competitors have often been working on it for months or years. The advantage belongs to the organization that spotted it when it was still faint, fragmented, and easy to dismiss.

Golden Dome and the Commercial Space Opportunity: How a $25 Billion Missile Defense Program...

President Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill into law on July 4, 2025. Among its provisions was a $25 billion initial investment in the Golden Dome missile defense initiative and $500 million in military space launch infrastructure. Congress subsequently passed the FY2026 defense appropriations bill on February 3, 2026, adding $13.4 billion in space and missile defense systems for Golden Dome-related programs. Combined, that is more than $38 billion committed to a single program in the span of eight months, the largest sustained defense space investment in a generation.

Commercial Earth Observation for Defense: Growth Segment or Dangerous Dependence?

Commercial Earth observation for defense is no longer a side business attached to civilian remote sensing. It has become one of the most active and politically charged segments in the space economy. Governments now buy commercial electro-optical imagery, synthetic aperture radar, radio-frequency sensing, thermal imagery, analytics, and tasking rights not just to supplement classified systems but to support routine military planning, crisis monitoring, border surveillance, targeting support, disaster response, sanctions enforcement, and strategic warning. In one sense, that is a growth story with real momentum. In another, it is a warning sign. The more defense institutions come to rely on commercial Earth observation, the more they discover that the data supply chain is shaped by corporate incentives, government export controls, licensing rules, financing pressures, and political decisions made outside the battlefield.

Dispatch Emerges from Stealth: Pioneering Refurbishable Reentry Vehicles and Uncrewed Space Stations for Scalable...

In the rapidly evolving New Space economy, where launch costs continue to plummet thanks to vehicles like SpaceX’s Starship and Blue Origin’s New Glenn, one critical bottleneck remains: getting high-value payloads back to Earth efficiently, affordably, and on demand. On April 1, 2026, Y Combinator-backed startup Dispatch officially emerged from stealth to address exactly this challenge. The company is building refurbishable reentry vehicles and permanent, uncrewed “lights-out” space stations designed from the ground up for in-space manufacturing of ultra-high-value materials - such as advanced semiconductors, novel pharmaceuticals, and biotech products - that can only be produced in microgravity.

Billions Over the Moon: Is Artemis II Worth the Price Tag When Earth’s Crises...

Four billion dollars per flight is what NASA's Office of Inspector General calculated as the operating cost of the Space Launch System and Orion spacecraft for a single Artemis mission. A 2021 audit placed the figure at $4.1 billion per launch, and a follow-up 2024 audit found that by the originally scheduled September 2025 launch window, NASA would have spent more than $55 billion on SLS, Orion, and its Exploration Ground Systems combined. The launch date then slipped further, to April 1, 2026, from Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, after hydrogen leaks disrupted a February fueling test and a March countdown attempt.

Starlink Satellite Breaks Apart in Orbit: SpaceX Investigates Second Anomaly in Months

On March 29, 2026, a SpaceX Starlink satellite designated 34343 experienced a sudden “anomaly” while orbiting at approximately 560 km (about 348 miles) altitude, leading to a loss of communications and what appears to be a fragmentation event.

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