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SpaceX Starship from V1 to V4

SpaceX’s Starship and Super Heavy program had moved through four recognizable vehicle families by May 26, 2026: early atmospheric prototypes, V1 or Block 1 integrated flight-test vehicles, V2 or Block 2 higher-capacity vehicles, and V3 or Block 3 vehicles tied to SpaceX’s newer reuse and propellant-transfer design path. A V4 or Block 4 version had also entered public discussion as a planned future configuration rather than a flown vehicle. SpaceX’s Twelfth Flight Test launched on May 22, 2026, from Starbase, Texas, and marked the first flight of the V3 Starship and Super Heavy architecture.

How Do RF Monitoring, Direct-to-Device Satellite Services, and Smartphones Affect Military Operations?

The U.S. Department of Defense restricted geolocation features on personal and government-issued devices in operational areas in 2018 after recognizing that connected devices could expose personnel locations, routines, and force patterns. That policy decision remains a useful entry point for understanding RF monitoring and direct-to-device military operations because the same communications devices that help people stay connected also create emissions, metadata, and location trails that can reveal activity to adversaries.

Satellite Laser Communications Primer

On April 28, 2026, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration reported that Artemis II’s optical terminal exchanged 484 gigabytes of data between Orion and Earth during the crewed lunar flyby, using laser links for high-definition video, images, procedures, engineering data, science data, and voice communications. That event placed satellite laser communications in a different category from earlier laboratory tests and short demonstrations. The technology had supported a crewed mission at lunar distance, carried public-facing imagery, and proved that optical links could operate as part of a human spaceflight communications architecture.

What Is the Taxonomy of Scientific Disciplines Related to the Space Economy?

The taxonomy of scientific disciplines related to the space economy begins with a practical fact: space activity is no longer limited to astronomy, rocketry, or national exploration programs. It now connects research laboratories, satellite manufacturers, launch firms, data analytics companies, insurers, regulators, defense and security agencies, universities, standards bodies, and commercial customers that use space-based services without owning spacecraft. A taxonomy must explain this whole knowledge structure without reducing the space economy to launch vehicles and satellites.

What Is Astropolitics?

On May 7, 2026, Paraguay became the 67th nation to sign the Artemis Accords, placing a South American country inside a U.S.-led framework for civil space cooperation, lunar activity, transparency, emergency assistance, and peaceful exploration. That single diplomatic act shows why astropolitics has moved beyond abstract theory. Space activity now creates alliances, legal expectations, industrial demand, military planning problems, and political signals that reach far beyond launch sites and mission control rooms.

What Is the Van Allen Belt?

Explorer 1, launched on January 31, 1958, revealed that Earth is surrounded by intense regions of trapped radiation. The Van Allen belt is the common name for those regions, more precisely called the Van Allen radiation belts. Although people often use the singular phrase, Earth has two main belts rather than one simple shell. These belts contain charged particles, mainly electrons and protons, that move at high speed and remain trapped by Earth’s magnetic field.

NSE in the Media

New Space Economy’s work has been recognized, quoted, and referenced by a growing range of third-party organizations, publications, research groups, industry observers, and professional communities interested in the future of space activity. This list represents a subset of publications that have quoted NSE analysts or referenced NSE articles across topics such as commercial space markets, launch activity, satellite infrastructure, space policy, lunar development, defense and security, emerging technologies, and the broader economic forces shaping the space sector.

What Would It Take to Refuel a Blue Origin Human Landing System Using Resources...

NASA selected Blue Origin on May 19, 2023, to develop the Blue Moon lander for the agency’s Artemis human landing system program, with a $3.4 billion firm-fixed-price award that included an uncrewed demonstration mission before a crewed demonstration under the Artemis V landing architecture described at the time. In March 2026, NASA updated the Artemis transportation sequence, adding a 2027 low Earth orbit demonstration mission to test system capabilities closer to Earth before a planned 2028 astronaut mission to the lunar South Pole. As of May 19, 2026, NASA still describes Blue Origin as one of the two American companies developing human landing systems to move astronauts from lunar orbit to the lunar surface and back for Artemis.

Which Global Space Exploration Missions Are Planned for 2026 and 2027?

As of May 27, 2026, NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is targeted for launch no earlier than September 2026, the European Space Agency lists Plato for January 2027, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency lists Martian Moons eXploration for fiscal year 2026, and China’s Chang’e-7 lunar mission is scheduled for 2026. Global space exploration missions 2026 and 2027 are concentrated in four categories: lunar surface delivery, human exploration preparation, planetary science, and astronomical observatories. The dates remain planning dates, launch targets, or arrival targets rather than guaranteed outcomes, because deep-space missions depend on spacecraft readiness, launch vehicle availability, planetary alignment, regulatory clearances, and mission assurance reviews.

What Makes the Moon’s Magnetic Field, Atmosphere, and Gravity So Unusual?

The Moon sits about 239,000 miles, or 385,000 kilometers, from Earth, close enough to shape tides and familiar enough to seem simple. Its environment is anything but simple. The Moon’s magnetic field, atmosphere, and gravity combine three different kinds of strangeness: a vanished global magnetic system that left magnetic fossils behind, a near-vacuum atmosphere continually rebuilt by impacts, and a gravity field so uneven that spacecraft navigation once exposed hidden mass concentrations beneath ancient basins. NASA describes the Moon as having a thin exosphere, surface gravity about one-sixth of Earth’s, and a very weak present-day magnetic field compared with Earth’s field.

The Moon Is an Equipment Killer

NASA’s 2026 explanation of weather on the Moon describes a surface with temperatures above 250°F and below -410°F, hardly any atmosphere, no global magnetic field, and constant exposure to micrometeoroids, solar wind, galactic cosmic rays, and solar eruptions. That is the physical setting behind how the lunar environment affects equipment. A machine placed on the Moon does not face one clean engineering problem. It faces dust, heat, cold, radiation, vacuum, terrain, static charge, and high-speed impacts at the same time.

NASA Moon Base Plans: Artemis, the Lunar South Pole, and the Buildout of a...

NASA’s Moon Base plans now place the lunar South Pole at the center of the agency’s next stage of human exploration. The location matters because it combines scientific value, operational difficulty, potential resource access, and symbolic weight. NASA presents the Moon Base as the future home base for Artemis astronauts, a surface outpost where crews will live, work, test systems, conduct science, and prepare operational methods for later missions to Mars. The plan is no longer framed only as a sequence of short landings. It is presented as a staged buildout of surface capability, starting with robotic missions and moving toward continuous human activity.

How Satellite Services Are Used by Autonomous Weapons

On April 16, 2026, Reuters reported that a 2025 outage on the Starlink network disrupted a U.S. Navy test involving two dozen unmanned surface vessels for almost an hour. That episode offered a concrete answer to the question in this title. How satellite services are used by autonomous weapons is less about science fiction and more about maintaining the communications fabric around autonomous systems. The International Committee of the Red Cross describes autonomous weapon systems as weapons that select and apply force without human intervention after activation. In practice, many of those systems still depend on people and on wider command networks before launch, during transit, and after action. Satellite services sit inside that wider network. They carry supervision data, mission updates, position reports, and status information between machines and remote operators spread over large distances.

Google Zero: What It Means For Search, Publishers, Space Media, And The Open Web

Google Zero is a shorthand term for a search environment in which Google Search provides enough information directly on its own results pages that users have less reason to click through to external websites. It is not the name of a formal Google product. It is a term used by publishers, search analysts, marketers, and media executives to describe a possible future in which Google becomes less of a gateway to the open web and more of a self-contained answer system.

Products and Services That Keep the Space Industry Running

The rocket gets the glory. Payload makes the headlines. But neither would exist without the sprawling ecosystem of suppliers, service providers, and specialized operators who never appear in the press release. The ancillary economy of the space industry, which encompasses everything from liquid oxygen production to orbital insurance underwriting, from spectrum licensing to astronaut medical screening, accounts for a substantial share of the total money flowing through the sector each year.

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