
AALTO Targets Australia for Zephyr’s Next Operating Site, Launching Call to National Payload Industry
AALTO HAPS, an Airbus subsidiary, announced that northern Australia will host its second Zephyr launch and landing site, dubbed AALTOPORT, following the successful 67‑day stratospheric flight in 2025. The company is calling Australian payload developers to join bilateral talks at NTDefence Week in April 2026, aiming to build a national Stratospace ecosystem. Collaboration with the Northern Territory Government will focus on regulatory approval, technical specifications, and funding pathways. Zephyr’s solar‑powered, 75‑kg platform promises persistent communications, ISR and earth‑observation services for both commercial and government users.
Smart Dragon 3 Rocket Sends Seven Satellites to Orbit From Sea Platform
China’s Smart Dragon 3 solid‑propellant carrier rocket lifted off from a sea‑based launch ship off Guangdong, delivering seven satellites—including a Pakistani remote‑sensing platform—into sun‑synchronous orbit. The 31‑metre vehicle, capable of carrying up to 1.5 tonnes per flight, completed its ninth mission, marking the...
Mohe Ground Station Boosts Polar Satellite Data Coverage
China’s Mohe Satellite Data Receiving Station, the nation’s highest‑latitude ground facility, began operations on Dec 12, 2025. Leveraging its polar location, the station expands China’s remote‑sensing footprint by roughly 4 million km² and supports 25 land‑observation satellites. It processes over 24 satellite tracks...

The Airlines With The World's Most Spacious Economy Seats In 2026
In early 2026 a handful of carriers stand out for offering the most spacious economy cabins, measured by seat pitch and width. ANA and Japan Airlines lead with up to 34 inches of pitch, while Emirates standardises 32 inches across its A350...

Lufthansa Group Marks 65 Years of Hong Kong Presence with Promise of Product Innovation
Lufthansa Group celebrates 65 years of Hong Kong‑Frankfurt service, reaffirming its commitment to Hong Kong and the Greater Bay Area (GBA). The carrier currently runs two daily Lufthansa flights to Frankfurt and a Swiss International Air Lines service to Zurich,...
The Balloon Mission Raising the Bar for Exoplanet Science
Exoplanet atmospheric characterization has been dominated by the James Webb Space Telescope, but its high demand limits observation time. Researchers have introduced EXCITE, a balloon‑borne infrared telescope designed specifically for exoplanet climate studies. By flying on a high‑altitude gondola, EXCITE...
Earth's Radiation Fingerprint
Chinese researchers demonstrated that observing Earth from the lunar surface yields a unified measurement of the planet’s radiation budget, overcoming the spatial‑temporal trade‑offs of low‑Earth‑orbit and geostationary satellites. Their analysis showed that more than 90% of Earth’s outgoing radiation pattern...

Eurowings and SunExpress: Expanded Codeshare and New CEOs Point to Closer Ties
Eurowings and SunExpress have expanded their codeshare agreement from five to fourteen routes, adding thirteen new connections and dropping four under‑performing services. The new routes focus on linking German cities with Western European leisure destinations, shifting away from the original...

Isaacman Planning to Meet with Head of Roscosmos
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced he intends to attend the upcoming Soyuz MS‑29 crewed launch from Baikonur this summer, marking the first time a NASA chief will be present at a Russian launch since 2018. He also plans to meet with...

The Best Ways to Avoid Paying High Fuel Surcharges When Booking Flights With Avios
British Airways’ Avios award bookings often carry fuel surcharges that can top $1,000 per way, eroding the appeal of “free” tickets. The airline’s own flights remain expensive, but many partners—Aer Lingus, Iberia, American, Alaska, Qantas, and JAL—offer the same Avios currency...

Simulation Shows That Nuking Earth-Bound Asteroids Might Be Safe
Researchers from the University of Oxford and deflection startup OuSoCo used the HiRadMat particle accelerator to expose a Campo del Cielo iron meteorite sample to intense radiation, mimicking a nuclear blast. The sample first softened, then flexed and ultimately restrengthened,...
Study Outlines How JWST and Ariel Could Team up on Exoplanet Atmospheres
A new pre‑print from the Ariel‑JWST Synergy Working Group details how the James Webb Space Telescope and ESA’s upcoming Ariel mission can coordinate to study exoplanet atmospheres. The paper proposes joint target selection, simultaneous infrared spectroscopy, and shared data‑fusion pipelines...

From Soyuz to the Stars: A Roscosmos Trivia Quiz
The article presents a Roscosmos‑focused trivia quiz that highlights the agency’s Soviet heritage and its contemporary role in spaceflight. It notes that the modern Russian space agency was established in 1992 and that the Vostochny Cosmodrome was built to lessen...

Miliband Targets The Sky With Radical Plan To Beam Energy From Space
Britain’s new net‑zero roadmap, championed by Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, proposes orbiting solar power stations to supply the UK with continuous, large‑scale electricity. The government‑commissioned study outlines ultra‑light satellites that convert sunlight to microwave beams, received by ground rectennas. Early...
Report: Crowded Orbits – A Call to Action on Space Debris
The World Economic Forum and the Center for Space Futures released a report warning that orbital congestion has surged as commercial launches multiply, raising collision risk to 29% in certain altitude bands by 2032. The study, produced with the Saudi...

Trump's Greenland Grab Is Part of a New Space Race – and the Stakes Are Getting Higher
President Trump’s push to expand U.S. presence in Greenland highlights the island’s emerging role as a strategic gateway for space operations. High‑latitude launch sites in Greenland enable efficient polar and sun‑synchronous orbits, making the territory attractive to private launch firms...

The New Space Station Gold Rush: Which Companies Are Actually Ready for LEO?
The International Space Station will retire by 2030, prompting a surge of private firms racing to build replacement outposts in low‑Earth orbit. Vast Space plans to launch its single‑module Haven‑1 in early 2027, while Axiom Space is incrementally adding modules...

What Are the Dangers of Moon Dust?
Moon dust, the fine fraction of lunar regolith, is uniquely sharp, abrasive, chemically reactive, and electrostatically charged, making it a multi‑domain hazard for human health and hardware. Apollo missions documented irritation to eyes, lungs, and skin, as well as accelerated...

Best-Selling Nonfiction Books About Space Stations
The article surveys the most popular nonfiction titles that focus on space stations, highlighting memoirs, human‑factors science, and technical “how‑it‑works” books. It explains how these works prioritize lived experience, routine operations, and system explanations over pure engineering detail. The piece...

U.S. Air Force T-7A Program Raises Cost Concerns
The U.S. Air Force is scrutinizing the T‑7A Red Hawk trainer program’s cost structure as it nears the Milestone C decision that will trigger full‑rate production. The $9.2 billion fixed‑price contract has generated over $2 billion in Boeing‑reported losses due to engineering and...

NASA Launches Twin Rocket Missions From Alaska to Study Mysterious Black Auroras
NASA launched two sub‑orbital sounding rockets from Alaska’s Poker Flat Research Range to investigate the electrical dynamics of auroras. The BADASS mission reached 224 miles altitude to study rare black auroras, while the GNEISS mission deployed twin rockets to 198...

China Launches AI-Driven Satellite Constellation to Transform Space Computing
China’s Zhejiang Lab has deployed a 12‑satellite AI‑driven constellation, the first phase of its Three‑Body Computing Constellation. The satellites host two 8‑billion‑parameter AI models for remote sensing and astronomical analysis, and have demonstrated inter‑satellite networking and on‑orbit data processing. In...
U.S. Government Shutdown Sends Shockwaves Through Aviation and Global Tourism
The United States has entered another government shutdown, directly affecting the Transportation Security Administration and parts of the Federal Aviation Administration. Thousands of TSA officers are working without pay, creating staffing shortages and longer security lines at major hubs such...

U.S. Military Advances Compact Nuclear Reactor Program
The U.S. Department of Defense and the Department of Energy airlifted Valar Atomics' compact WardZero nuclear reactor to Hill Air Force Base, Utah, for testing. The effort fulfills Executive Order 14301, which mandates domestic nuclear innovation and sets a July 4 2026 deadline...

Russian Military Aircraft Maker Reports Heavy Financial Losses
TANTK Beriev, Russia’s premier airborne early‑warning aircraft manufacturer, posted a 2025 net loss of roughly $65 million after revenue collapsed to $49 million, a 3.8‑fold year‑over‑year decline. Production costs fell more slowly, squeezing gross profit to just $3 million. The firm’s debt rose to...

Russia Destroys Ukraine’s Cruise Missile Production
Ukraine’s domestically‑developed FP‑5 Flamingo cruise missile production line was hit by a Russian missile strike, temporarily halting output. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the damaged facility has been relocated and production has already resumed. The Flamingo, touted for a 3,000‑kilometre range, has...

SpaceX Dragon as a Rescue Vehicle for Artemis
SpaceX is evaluating a modified Dragon capsule, dubbed “Dragon Block R,” as a dedicated lifeboat for NASA’s Artemis program. The concept adds a propulsive “Super Trunk” service module, a fifth crew seat, and an Umbilical Interface Adapter kit to accommodate Orion...

$1.5-Billion NISAR Satellite Powers Near-Real-Time Soil Moisture Tracking Across India
The $1.5 billion NASA‑ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) satellite, launched in July 2025, now delivers 100 m resolution soil‑moisture products across India on a 12‑day repeat cycle. Using dual‑frequency S‑ and L‑band radar, the mission provides near‑real‑time moisture maps for irrigated, rain‑fed...

What Is Space Adaptation Syndrome?
Space adaptation syndrome (SAS) afflicts roughly 60‑70 % of astronauts during the first days of a low‑Earth‑orbit mission. The condition stems from a sensory conflict between visual cues and a vestibular system that no longer senses gravity, producing nausea, disorientation and...

NASA Has a New Problem to Fix Before the Next Artemis II Countdown Test
NASA is confronting a recurring hydrogen fuel leak on the Space Launch System ahead of Artemis II’s second countdown rehearsal. Technicians replaced seals on the Tail Service Mast Umbilicals, but a confidence test revealed reduced flow, prompting a filter swap before...
Decoding China's New Space Philosophy
China’s fifteenth five‑year plan (2026‑2030) places space at the heart of its national agenda, as highlighted by a China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC) press release. The plan outlines ambitious targets, including a lunar research station, a Mars sample‑return...
Feb. 14, 1980: SolarMax Launches
On February 14, 1980 the Solar Maximum Mission (SolarMax) lifted off from Cape Canaveral to study solar flares, the solar constant, and the Sun’s atmosphere in X‑ray, gamma‑ray, and ultraviolet wavelengths. Early in its flight the spacecraft suffered a coronagraph electronics glitch...

Barbados Welcomes Aer Lingus’ New Direct Dublin–Barbados Service
Airline Aer Lingus announced a new direct service between Dublin and Barbados, slated to begin on 31 March and run through 31 May. The route will be operated with the fuel‑efficient Airbus A321XLR and will offer three weekly flights at fares starting €229. Barbados...

NAVAIR Issues RFI for Marine Corps Medium Range Tactical UAS
The Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) issued a Sources‑Sought notice seeking a Medium‑Range Tactical (MRT) unmanned aircraft system for the U.S. Marine Corps. The RFI calls for a rugged, VTOL‑capable platform under 20 lb gross weight, with at least 2.5 hours endurance,...

Delta Announces New Nonstop Service Between Twin Cities and Hawaii
Delta Air Lines announced a new seasonal nonstop service between Minneapolis‑St. Paul International Airport (MSP) and Kahului Airport (OGG) on Maui, launching Dec. 19 and running through April 2027. The route uses Airbus A330‑300 aircraft and adds a second Hawaiian destination from...

Delta Goes All-In on Hawaii With New Nonstop Routes
Delta Air Lines announced a suite of new nonstop flights connecting the U.S. mainland to Hawaii, including daily services from Atlanta, Detroit and Minneapolis to Honolulu and Maui. The carrier will deploy its latest Airbus A321neo aircraft, offering expanded premium...

Senate Committee Advances FCC Satellite Licensing Bill After Changes
The Senate Commerce Committee voted to advance a revised Satellite and Telecommunications Streamlining Act, softening the original bill's automatic‑approval clause for satellite licenses. The amendment, crafted by Ranking Member Maria Cantwell and Chairman Ted Cruz, requires the FCC to develop...

Build with Ukraine: Wingcopter and TAF Industries Establish Joint Venture to Scale Production of Reconnaissance Drones in Germany for Ukraine
Wingcopter and Ukraine’s TAF Industries signed an MoU at the Munich Security Conference to create a joint venture that will produce reconnaissance drones in Germany for Ukraine. The partnership combines TAF’s licensed battlefield‑proven designs with Wingcopter’s manufacturing and engineering capabilities,...

Top 10 Space Stories of 2025
The 2025 roundup of space headlines highlighted a volatile commercial launch market, lingering federal budget uncertainty, and two landmark scientific milestones. Private providers experienced both record‑breaking crewed flights and costly setbacks, while Congress debated the next round of NASA and...

Telesat Government Solutions Wins Spot on U.S. Missile Defense Agency SHIELD Contract
Telesat Government Solutions, the U.S. arm of Canada’s Telesat, has been awarded a position on the Pentagon’s $1.51 billion Missile Defense Agency SHIELD contract, a 10‑year IDIQ program. The win places the company’s upcoming Lightspeed low‑Earth‑orbit (LEO) satellite constellation as a...

Robotics & Automation News Publishes In-Depth Trend Analysis on the Future of Drone Logistics
Robotics & Automation News has released a premium trend analysis titled "Drone Logistics: Infrastructure, Economics and Market Outlook (2026‑2032)" that evaluates the operational realities and economic constraints of drone delivery. The report finds that drones will serve as a specialised...

Space Emerges as New Front in Great Power Competition, Officials Warn
At the Munich Cyber Security Conference officials warned that space has shifted from a neutral commons to a frontline of great‑power competition, with satellites now integral to banking, military, and weather systems. The vulnerability of undersea cables, which underpin the...

Hanwha Aerospace, Frankenburg to Develop Counter-Drone Systems for Future Armored Vehicles
South Korea's Hanwha Aerospace and Estonia's Frankenburg Technologies signed an MoU to co‑develop counter‑unmanned aerial systems (C‑UAS) for next‑generation armored platforms. The collaboration will integrate Frankenburg's interceptor missiles, launchers and fire‑control software into Hanwha's upcoming armored command vehicle. Hanwha will...
India’s Industry Confederation Releases Phased Roadmap for AAM
The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) released a phased roadmap to embed advanced air mobility (AAM) into India’s urban transport, using a hypothetical Gurugram‑Connaught Place‑Noida corridor as a test case. The plan prioritises high‑social‑impact missions such as medical logistics and...

Taiwan’s Air Force Cancels C-130H Upgrade, Will Acquire 10 U.S. C-130J Transport Aircraft
Taiwan’s Air Force has scrapped a multi‑year upgrade of its legacy C‑130H fleet, deeming it too costly, and approved the purchase of ten new Lockheed Martin C‑130J Super Hercules transports from the United States. The decision creates a mixed “high‑low”...

Air Canada Shares Surge as Carrier Signals Strong Start to 2026
Air Canada’s shares jumped, marking the biggest rise since May, after the airline reported a surge in bookings for 2026 versus 2025. Chief Commercial Officer Mark Galardo said the first half of 2026 is seeing a constructive environment, driven by...
Italy and UK Sign Declaration of Intent on AAM, IAM and UAS Harmonisation
The Italian Civil Aviation Authority (ENAC) and the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) signed a declaration of intent in London to jointly develop advanced air mobility (AAM), innovative air mobility (IAM) and uncrewed aerial system (UAS) harmonisation. The agreement focuses...

Startup Bets on New Approach to Space-Based Missile Defense
California startup Wardstone has closed a $5 million seed round to develop space‑based kinetic interceptors. The company plans to test its first prototype on a suborbital sounding rocket in late April, employing a novel “buckshot” particle‑cloud approach to counter hypersonic missiles....

EFW Signs New A330 Freighter Conversion Contract with Hengqin Winglet
Elbe Flugzeugwerke (EFW) has secured a new passenger‑to‑freighter (P2F) conversion contract with Chinese lessor Hengqin Winglet Aircraft Technology. The A330‑P2F conversion will be performed at a partner facility in China, with work slated to begin in mid‑2026 and technical support...