China’s Tianwen-3 Mars sample return mission is entering flight hardware development, targeting a late 2028 launch to seek out biosignatures on the Red Planet. The mission has achieved breakthroughs ...
A Long March 8A rocket launches a batch of satellites for the Guowang satellite constellation from the Hainan Commercial Space Launch Site on March 12, 2026. Credit: CASC HELSINKI — China resumed ...
Matt Anderson testifies at a March 5 Senate Commerce Committee confirmation hearing for his nomination to be NASA deputy administrator. Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls WASHINGTON — The Senate Commerce ...
SpaceNews caught up with Rebecca Evernden, the recently appointed Director of the new UK Space Agency, at Space Comm Expo in London. This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity. SpaceNews: ...
Part of the Space Launch System rocket, including its ICPS upper stage, in the Vehicle Assembly Building after rollback Feb. 25. Credit: NASA/Cory S Huston WASHINGTON — NASA is pushing ahead with an ...
WASHINGTON — Voyager Technologies is opening a new electronics manufacturing and engineering facility in Long Beach, California, expanding its presence in a region that has become a hub for space and ...
A Vienna-based startup has raised $4 million to scale a software platform that generates synthetic satellite data for training AI models to detect environmental and operational risks.
Space Minds is a new audio and video podcast from SpaceNews that focuses on the inspiring leaders, technologies and exciting opportunities in space. The weekly podcast features compelling interviews ...
WASHINGTON — Astranis, a San Francisco–based operator of small geostationary communications satellites, announced March 12 that retired U.S. Air Force Gen. John Hyten has joined the company as ...
SAN FRANCISCO – Mantis Space, a New Mexico startup planning a constellation to supply solar power to spacecraft, emerged from stealth March 12 with $10 million in seed funding.
Firefly Aerospace’s Alpha rocket successfully returned to flight March 11, more than 10 months after the rocket’s previous launch failed.
NASA’s approach to managing the development of crewed lunar landers for Artemis has successfully controlled costs but not schedule.
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