Today's Aerospace Pulse

Blue Origin’s New Glenn suffers catastrophic engine failure during static fire
A BE‑4 methane/LOX engine on Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket failed four seconds after ignition, causing a catastrophic explosion that destroyed the first‑stage booster and damaged Launch Complex 36A. No personnel were injured. An FAA‑led investigation, supported by the U.S. Space Force, is under way.
Also developing:
By the numbers: Disciplined Growth Acquisition Corp raises $150M in IPO
Eve Air Mobility “Exceeds 50 eVTOL Test Flights – Six Aircraft Dedicated to Certification Campaign”
Eve Air Mobility announced its full‑scale engineering prototype has completed its 50th successful test flight, accumulating more than two hours of airborne time since the maiden flight on Dec. 19, 2025. The milestone provides high‑fidelity data that deepens the company’s understanding of performance, energy management and noise characteristics. Eve plans to begin production of conforming prototypes this year, with six aircraft earmarked for a certification flight‑test campaign under Brazil’s civil aviation authority, ANAC. The program is now expanding envelope testing, including higher forward speeds and stability assessments, ahead of full transition flights later in the year.
Top UK Drone Startup Wins Pentagon Test, Yet Departs Britain
Yesterday a Russian warship escorted sanctioned tankers through the English Channel, unchallenged. Today we're about to lose one of the most exciting defence startups in the country to America. > A small British team just topped the Pentagon's own Drone Dominance...
Artemis Astronauts to Shed Light on Space Health Risks
NASA's Artemis II mission sent four astronauts on a lunar flyby, exposing them to deep‑space radiation levels far beyond those in low‑Earth orbit. The agency equipped Orion with radiation sensors, collected blood, saliva, and smartwatch health data, and installed bio‑mimetic chips...
EBAA Cancels EBACE 2026
The European Business Aviation Association (EBAA) announced the cancellation of EBACE 2026, which was scheduled for June 2‑4 in Geneva. Despite a re‑imagined static display, stronger operator focus, new networking zones, and a revised cost structure, the event failed to...

Disperse to Survive: The Logic of French Forward Deterrence
French President Emmanuel Macron unveiled a new "forward deterrence" doctrine that would temporarily disperse France’s nuclear‑capable Rafale B/F3‑R fighters to allied European bases. The plan stresses strategic‑only use of nuclear weapons and aims to boost survivability of the airborne leg...

SpaceX Is Keeping the Space Station Alive Again This Weekend
SpaceX will launch Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus XL cargo spacecraft on April 11, targeting the International Space Station with over 11,000 pounds of supplies for Expedition 73. The NG‑24 mission, named S.S. Steven R. Nagel, uses a Falcon 9 after Northrop switched from the...

Europe and China Are Running a Joint Space Mission in an Era When They Agree on Almost Nothing
Europe’s ESA and China’s Academy of Sciences are set to launch the 2.3‑tonne Smile satellite from French Guiana on a Vega‑C rocket later this month. The spacecraft will travel to an elliptical orbit with a 121,000 km apogee over the North...

Bjorn’s Corner: Blended Wing Body Airliners. Part 5
The aerospace community remains fixated on blended wing body (BWB) airliners, with new concepts announced annually despite limited commercial viability. Bjorn argues that the only realistic market for BWB designs is long‑range military transport, not passenger jets. Boeing, after completing...

Artemis II Gives Airbus Hope For European Spaceflight
Artemis II’s 10‑day lunar flyby concluded with the European Service Module (ESM) – built by Airbus Defence and Space in Bremen – performing flawlessly, powering Orion’s life‑support and propulsion. The mission showcases Airbus’s heritage from the ISS Columbus lab and Automated...
Student-Built Instruments Head to Space
Astrophysics undergraduates Eva Godwin and Gael Gonzalez at the College of Charleston have built two research instruments that will fly aboard Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus‑24 cargo mission to the International Space Station. The payload includes a liquid‑lens optical camera for studying biological...

Bahrain's Gulf Air, Iraqi Airways Resume Home Base Ops
Gulf Air and Iraqi Airways have restarted scheduled flights from their home bases after the US‑Iran cease‑fire opened Bahrain and Iraq airspaces. Gulf Air’s first post‑pause flight departed Bahrain for Riyadh on 9 April using an A320‑200N and began ferrying aircraft...

ISRO Successfully Conducts Second Integrated Air Drop Test for Gaganyaan Mission
India’s space agency ISRO completed its second integrated air‑drop test (IADT‑02) for the Gaganyaan crewed mission at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota. The test dropped a 4.8‑tonne dummy capsule from three kilometres using a Chinook helicopter, validating the...

Forgotten Vent Plug Caused Wing Collapse From Overpressure
Ever seen what happens when a fuel tank gets way too pressurized? This old C-141 Starlifter had its entire wing bend and collapse like cheap cardboard during ground refueling... all because a vent plug was accidentally left in after a...

Turkish Airlines Replaces Management, Names New CEO and Chairman
Turkish Airlines announced a sweeping management overhaul, naming Ahmet Olmustur as its new chief executive officer and Murat Seker as chairman of the board. Olmustur replaces retiring CEO Bilal Eksi, while Seker succeeds Ahmet Bolat, who stepped down. The changes come as the airline...
Ukraine in Talks with Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain on Security Cooperation, Zelenskiy Says
Ukraine is negotiating security cooperation with Oman, Kuwait and Bahrain, aiming to share its drone‑defence expertise. President Zelenskiy highlighted recent 10‑year agreements with Saudi Arabia and Qatar and a deal with the UAE, after deploying over 200 experts who have...

SpaceX Revenue Will Be Close to Around $27-30 Billion in 2026
SpaceX’s Starlink service is slated to generate roughly $20 billion in 2025, nearly doubling its 2024 earnings of $11.8 billion. Subscriber acquisition is accelerating from 750,000 to 1.5 million new users each month, reshaping the company’s revenue mix. The airline and maritime segments...

NASA Managers Outline Artemis 2 Reentry and Address Propulsion Issue Ahead of Splashdown
NASA mission managers held a final status briefing ahead of Artemis 2’s splashdown, confirming the Orion crew capsule will reenter Earth’s atmosphere at roughly 40,233 kph (25,000 mph) and endure heat comparable to the Sun’s surface. The briefing detailed a tight reentry timeline,...

Blastoff — a Moment of Hope, From Space
NASA’s Artemis II mission completed a historic 10‑day lunar flyby, marking the farthest human spaceflight to date. The Orion crew, including pilot Victor Glover, reported a unifying view of Earth from the spacecraft’s windows. The flight tested critical launch and navigation...

Multi-Sensor Airspace Management System Deployed at Oklahoma Air & Space Port
Vigilant Aerospace has deployed its FlightHorizon TEMPO airspace management system at the Oklahoma Air & Space Port, integrating long‑range radars and transponder receivers to monitor thousands of square kilometers. The multi‑sensor network currently covers 5,000 km² and will expand to about...

Laser Firm 'over the Moon' To Play a Part in Artemis II Space Mission
Welsh laser specialist Spectrum Technologies supplied laser‑marked wiring for NASA’s Artemis II Orion capsule, the first Welsh‑made component on a crewed lunar fly‑by. The company’s machines printed unique alphanumeric codes on 32 km of wiring, enabling reliable identification of thousands of wires....

NYC Helicopter Crash Prompts Push for New Tourist-Flight Rules
U.S. lawmakers from New York City introduced the Helicopter Safety Parity Act, which would apply commercial airline safety standards to sightseeing helicopters after a 2025 Hudson River crash that killed Siemens Mobility chief Agustín Escobar Canadas, his wife and three...

Debris or Destiny: How Megaconstellation Operators Are Rewriting the Rules of Orbital Sustainability
Megaconstellation operators are reshaping orbital sustainability as low‑Earth‑orbit congestion surges. In 2025 Starlink alone executed roughly 300,000 collision‑avoidance maneuvers, while the CRASH Clock metric indicates close‑encounters are now 100 times more frequent than in 2018. SpaceX plans to lower 4,400 satellites...

Astronaut Honors Late Wife with Moon Crater Tribute
Nobody told Reid Wiseman that astronauts aren’t supposed to be poets. 🤧 He lost his wife Carroll to cancer in 2020. Raised his two daughters alone. Then flew to the Moon as Artemis II commander — and named a crater after...

“Lord of the Moon”: As NASA Crew Prepares for Splashdown, One Man Has Sold Millions in Lunar Real Estate
NASA’s Artemis II mission, its first crewed lunar flyby in over five decades, launched on April 1, 2026 and is slated to splash down in the Pacific off San Diego on April 12. The four‑astronaut crew includes Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canadian Jeremy Hansen. While NASA...

Why Japanese Firm’s Tie-Up with Ukrainian Drone Maker Sparks Concerns in Russia
Terra Drone, a Tokyo‑based firm, announced a strategic investment in Ukrainian start‑up Amazing Drones to develop low‑cost interceptor UAVs. Russia protested the deal as a hostile act, summoning Japanese Ambassador Akira Muto and accusing Japan of shifting toward arms cooperation...
From 5,000°F Fireball to Splashdown in 13 Minutes
Tomorrow, Orion slams into Earth’s atmosphere at nearly 24,000 mph. 13 minutes later? Splashdown off the coast of San Diego where the US Navy is already waiting. In those 13 minutes, the spacecraft goes from a 5,000°F fireball to a controlled ocean...
ClearSpace Launches Robot to Clean Space Debris
ClearSpace Unveils #Robotic Spacecraft to Capture and Remove Dead Satellites by @spaceandtech_ #SpaceTech #AI #Robots #Engineering #Innovation #Technology https://t.co/cmG85VPICD

Watch the Artemis II Crew Return to Earth
The Artemis II crew is set to splash down in the Pacific Ocean near San Diego on April 10, and CBS News will broadcast a live one‑hour special covering the return. Hosted by Jericka Duncan, the program features astronaut Suni Williams, Lt. Col Dave Mahan, and other...
Boom Supersonic’s Relentless Grit Defies Every Setback
Happy investor in @boomsupersonic since the beginning The company - and its leader @bscholl - redefine grit. Like the old Chuck Norris joke: they’ve died a few times already but Death hasn’t found the balls to come get them… 💪🫡
Pilots Fear Retaliation After Refusing Middle East Flights
Airline pilots fear retribution over refusing to fly in Middle East, aviators' group says https://t.co/swrPhjoFwK
106 Flights Disrupted as Cairo Becomes Main Diversion Hub Amid Middle East Airspace Crisis
More than 106 flights linked to Cairo International Airport have been delayed, cancelled or diverted after the Middle East airspace crisis closed key corridors. The surge in unscheduled traffic is straining Egypt’s ground operations and creating a cascade of missed...
Boom Shifts to Video Investor Updates During Engine Build
As we enter the build phase for our first engine, Boom is moving to video updates for our investors. Here is our most recent investor update (financial info redacted). Hint: there is an Easter egg 🥚 https://t.co/RyE1syw6Pn
Delta’s 15‑Year Premium Shift Boosts Revenue per Seat 20% and Drives $5.4B Premium Sales
Delta Air Lines’ 15‑year premium‑brand overhaul has lifted revenue per seat by roughly 20% versus rivals. Premium ticket revenue reached $5.4 billion in Q1, growing 14% year‑over‑year, while the airline’s partnership with American Express now generates $8 billion annually, about 10% of total...

Bits: BA Drops Jeddah and Cuts Other ME Routes, 100% Bonus Buying Hilton Points
British Airways is permanently ending its Jeddah service, a route launched in November 2024, and will cut daily frequencies to Dubai, Doha, Tel Aviv, Riyadh and suspend Bahrain and Amman until the winter timetable. The airline is redeploying the freed...
Ukrainian Drone Unit Strikes Russian Gas Tanker From Libyan Base, Expanding War’s Reach
Ukrainian drone operators, deployed under a secret agreement with Libya’s Tripoli government, damaged the Russian‑flagged Arctic Metagaz LNG carrier on March 3. The strike, launched from a military facility in Tripoli, underscores a widening maritime dimension of the Ukraine‑Russia war and raises...
NATO Pushes for Cold‑Weather Drone Tech to Guard Arctic Frontiers
NATO officials announced a renewed drive to acquire inexpensive drones that can operate in extreme Arctic cold, citing gaps in situational awareness and rising Russian and Chinese activity. Experts warned that battery performance, sensor icing and lack of spare parts...
Virgin Galactic Restarts Ticket Sales at $750,000 per Seat, 50 Spots Open
Virgin Galactic announced the reopening of its commercial ticket sales, offering 50 new sub‑orbital seats at $750,000 each. The price jump from $600,000 reflects higher development costs and a push toward a twice‑weekly flight schedule, with flight testing expected in...

Hannah Lamb’s “Angle of Attack” Featured on Chief of Staff of the Army’s March 2026 Recommended Articles List
An article by Army Aviation officer Hannah Lamb titled “Angle of Attack: Apache Attack Helicopters in Unmanned Skies” has been included in the Chief of Staff of the Army’s March 2026 Recommended Articles List. The piece examines how the AH‑64E...

China’s International Capacity Growth: Part One – Balance Has Shifted on Routes to Western Europe
China’s international airline capacity is closing in on pre‑pandemic levels, but the recovery is uneven across markets. Inbound tourism to China has rebounded faster than outbound travel, which remains constrained by economic headwinds. Capacity on China‑Western Europe routes now exceeds...
NASA to Fix Orion’s Leaky Helium Valves Before Artemis
NASA will likely redesign Orion's leaky helium valves before sending the next Artemis crew to the Moon. https://t.co/ZB5x5JbH0t

Air Force Awards Contract to Develop Small, Disposable Engines for Missiles and Drones
The U.S. Air Force awarded engine startup Beehive Industries a $29.7 million contract to finish development of its Frenzy 8 disposable jet engine and begin low‑thrust Frenzy 6 production. The engines, weighing about 200 lb and delivering 100‑300 lb of thrust, are part of the...
Worst‑case Sonic Booms Differ
FWIW these kinds of trajectories are worst case sonic booms, very different from what are created by supersonic jets cruising at ~60,000’.

Two Day Delay for Blue Origin New Glenn
Blue Origin has pushed the third New Glenn launch from April 14 to April 16, citing that the rocket sections remain in the integration bay. The mission will carry AST SpaceMobile’s BlueBird 7, a Block 2 communications satellite with a 2,400‑sq‑ft array and 120 Mbps peak...

What Company Developed The A-10 Warthog, And How Many Are Still Flying?
The A‑10 Thunderbolt II, developed by Fairchild in the early 1970s, entered service in 1976 and saw its final production model in 1984, with 713 aircraft built. Each plane cost roughly $18 million then, equivalent to about $70 million in 2026 dollars, and...
Far Away Objects
Artemis II has set a new record for the farthest distance traveled by a crewed spacecraft, reaching a peak of 406,771 km from Earth. The mission demonstrates NASA’s progress toward deep‑space crewed flights beyond low‑Earth orbit. By contrast, the most distant human‑made...

Xoople Raises $130 Million in Funding to Gather Optical Data Of Earth For AI
Xoople, a Spanish data‑infrastructure startup, closed a $130 million Series B round led by Nazca Capital, MCH Private Equity, CDTI, Buenavista Equity Partners and Endeavor Catalyst. The funding will finance the development of its own optical‑satellite constellation in partnership with U.S. defense...
A Commercial Breakthrough for Commercial Aerospace Suppliers
Aviation suppliers are shifting from relying on new aircraft programs to extracting growth from commercial execution on existing platforms. With few new single‑aisle launches expected before 2034, OEMs are prioritising capacity, price, and contract economics, prompting suppliers to win more...

Domestic Anti-Ship Missile Set to Be Assessed: Source
Taiwan’s Chunghsan Institute of Science and Technology is set to begin initial capability assessments of its domestically developed subsonic anti‑ship cruise missile later this year. The prototype can strike surface targets at 900‑1,000 km, making it the longest‑range indigenous missile in...
Chinese Airlines Add Thousands of Europe Flights, Shrugging Off Iran War
Chinese airlines are planning to add thousands of new flights to European destinations over the next six months, capitalizing on the disruption caused by the Iran war. With permission to overfly Russian airspace, they can offer shorter routes and lower...
How American Airlines Makes Money
American Airlines reported $54.63 billion in operating revenue for fiscal 2025, a modest 0.8% increase year‑over‑year, while net income slipped to $111 million from $846 million. Passenger services remain the engine of the business, delivering $49.64 billion—about 91% of total revenue—while cargo contributed $839 million...