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Astronomers Detect a Bar of Iron in the Center of the Ring Nebula
NewsJan 16, 2026

Astronomers Detect a Bar of Iron in the Center of the Ring Nebula

Astronomers using the new WEAVE spectrograph on the Herschel Telescope in Chile have identified a narrow bar of ionised iron (Fe V and Fe VI) crossing the inner cavity of the Ring Nebula (M57). The structure stretches roughly 500 times the orbital...

By Behind the Black
The Recent Computer Hack of the European Space Agency Was Bigger than It Admitted
NewsJan 16, 2026

The Recent Computer Hack of the European Space Agency Was Bigger than It Admitted

The European Space Agency (ESA) disclosed a December‑era hack that it described as limited, but new reports reveal a far larger breach. Security researchers say attackers gained initial access in September via an unpatched public CVE and exfiltrated roughly 500 GB...

By Behind the Black
Isaacman Prime Directive: Recognize, Reward, Inspire
BlogJan 16, 2026

Isaacman Prime Directive: Recognize, Reward, Inspire

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman issued a Workforce Directive on Jan. 14, 2026 titled “Recognize, Reward, Inspire.” The memo outlines four cultural pillars—duty, mission urgency, ownership, and a recalibrated risk framework—and mandates concrete actions to overhaul recognition, performance evaluation, and reward programs. Within...

By NASA Watch
China Launches Four Satellites for Another Chinese Constellation
NewsJan 16, 2026

China Launches Four Satellites for Another Chinese Constellation

Galactic Energy successfully placed four additional satellites into its Tianqi internet‑of‑things constellation using a Ceres‑1 solid‑fuel rocket launched from a sea platform off China’s northeast coast. The mission marks the sixth launch for Tianqi, bringing the total to 41 satellites,...

By Behind the Black
AO-Resistant Material Boosts VLEO Satellite Longevity
NewsJan 16, 2026

AO-Resistant Material Boosts VLEO Satellite Longevity

Deposition Sciences, a Lockheed Martin subsidiary, announced that its Sunshade® thermal‑control material can survive atomic oxygen (AO) fluences above 1 × 10²² atoms cm⁻², equivalent to eight years in very low‑Earth orbit. The material, available as free‑film or adhesive tape, showed negligible performance loss from...

By SpaceNews
Starlink’s Low‑drag Antenna Outperforms Bulky Satellite Dishes
SocialJan 16, 2026

Starlink’s Low‑drag Antenna Outperforms Bulky Satellite Dishes

Does that guy know that a Viasat or a comparable GEO satellite antenna on airliners causes way more drag than a flat Starlink antenna? Ryanair might not be the most friendly (or innovative) airline. Why integrate Starlink if you care...

By Felix Schlang
Indra, Hisdesat Seek $400M Airbus Replacement After
SocialJan 16, 2026

Indra, Hisdesat Seek $400M Airbus Replacement After

.@IndraCompany/@Hisdesat prepare RFQ to replace SpainSat NG 2 after Dec failure. @AirbusSpace-built sat insured for $400M, would bring 2025 claims to $510M vs $675M in premiums. Indra says cause was 'millimeter-size object impact on vital area of sat.'https://t.co/DMEkBusYIv https://t.co/lEhqPh0fyj

By Peter B. de Selding
Revolutionising Astronaut Fitness for Deep Space Missions
NewsJan 16, 2026

Revolutionising Astronaut Fitness for Deep Space Missions

The European Space Agency unveiled the European Enhanced Exploration Exercise Device (E4D), a compact, multi‑mode workout system designed for long‑duration microgravity missions. E4D combines resistive training, cycling, rowing and rope pulling, delivering up to 270 kg of load and more than...

By European Space Agency News
NASA’s Crawler Preps for Artemis II Rollout
NewsJan 16, 2026

NASA’s Crawler Preps for Artemis II Rollout

On Jan. 9, 2026 NASA’s Crawler‑transporter 2 rolled toward the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center, positioning itself for the Artemis II rollout. The massive vehicle will carry the Space Launch System rocket and Orion crew capsule to Launch Complex 39B for a crewed...

By NASA - News Releases
Behind-the-Scenes Look at Preparations for Artemis II Launch
NewsJan 16, 2026

Behind-the-Scenes Look at Preparations for Artemis II Launch

NASA is finalizing preparations for Artemis II, the first crewed lunar flyby in over 50 years. The Space Launch System and Orion capsule are undergoing last‑minute checks at Kennedy Space Center. The rocket is slated to roll out to Launch Pad 39B...

By CBS News Space
Jan. 16, 2003: Space Shuttle Columbia’s Final Launch
NewsJan 16, 2026

Jan. 16, 2003: Space Shuttle Columbia’s Final Launch

On Jan. 16, 2003 the Space Shuttle Columbia launched on its 28th mission, STS‑107, dedicated to scientific research. The crew performed nearly 80 experiments over 16 days before a foam‑insulation strike damaged the left wing during ascent. The breach allowed super‑heated gases...

By Astronomy Magazine
Unidentified Aerial Phenomena: State-Led Initiatives
NewsJan 16, 2026

Unidentified Aerial Phenomena: State-Led Initiatives

Vermont lawmakers introduced bill H.654 to establish a ten‑person state task force focused on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP). The task force will rely on the Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies (SCU) for scientific analysis of reports ranging from drones to...

By Leonard David’s Inside Outer Space
Voyager Details Its Plans for In-Space Manufacturing
NewsJan 16, 2026

Voyager Details Its Plans for In-Space Manufacturing

Voyager Technologies has secured a U.S. patent for a microgravity process that grows ultra‑large optical crystals, a key component of next‑generation communications and computing hardware. The company will launch a demonstration to the International Space Station this spring, aiming to...

By Payload
How Astronauts Will Fix Their Gear Using Thin Air
NewsJan 16, 2026

How Astronauts Will Fix Their Gear Using Thin Air

A new arXiv paper shows that carbon dioxide, the dominant component of Mars’ atmosphere, can serve as a viable shield gas for selective laser melting (SLM) metal 3D printing. While Argon delivers about 98% area retention, CO₂ achieves roughly 85%,...

By Universe Today
Astronomer Uses 'China Sky Eye' To Reveal Binary Origin of Fast Radio Bursts
NewsJan 16, 2026

Astronomer Uses 'China Sky Eye' To Reveal Binary Origin of Fast Radio Bursts

An international team using the Five‑hundred‑meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST), nicknamed “China Sky Eye,” has delivered the first decisive evidence that some fast radio bursts (FRBs) arise in binary stellar systems. After 20 months of monitoring the repeating source FRB 220529A,...

By Phys.org - Space News
China Advances Plans for Dual Solar System Boundary Missions
NewsJan 16, 2026

China Advances Plans for Dual Solar System Boundary Missions

China has detailed coordinated plans for two solar‑system‑boundary missions, targeting the heliosphere’s head and tail with launches in 2033 and 2032 on Long March 5 rockets. Both spacecraft will carry 1 kWe nuclear heat‑pipe reactors, enabling over 30 years of operation and a mass...

By SpaceNews
Early Universe Dark Matter Born Red Hot Before Cooling
NewsJan 16, 2026

Early Universe Dark Matter Born Red Hot Before Cooling

Researchers at the University of Minnesota and Université Paris‑Saclay propose that dark matter may have been born ultrarelativistic—essentially "red hot"—during the post‑inflationary reheating era, contrary to the long‑standing belief that it must be cold from birth. Their analysis shows that such...

By SpaceDaily
Frozen Hydrogen Cyanide Crystals May Have Helped Spark Early Chemistry for Life
NewsJan 16, 2026

Frozen Hydrogen Cyanide Crystals May Have Helped Spark Early Chemistry for Life

Researchers used atomistic simulations to show that frozen hydrogen cyanide (HCN) crystals generate intense electric fields on their facets, accelerating chemical reactions at cryogenic temperatures. The study identified surface pathways that convert HCN into its more reactive isomer, hydrogen isocyanide...

By SpaceDaily
Slow Orbital Wobble Patterns Drive Ancient Greenhouse Climate Swings
NewsJan 16, 2026

Slow Orbital Wobble Patterns Drive Ancient Greenhouse Climate Swings

A new study shows Earth’s axial precession can drive abrupt, millennial‑scale climate swings even without ice sheets. Using high‑resolution sediment cores from China’s Songliao Basin, researchers identified 4,000‑5,000‑year humid‑arid cycles during the Late Cretaceous, a greenhouse period with CO₂ around...

By SpaceDaily
NASA Back for Seconds with New Food System Design Challenge
NewsJan 16, 2026

NASA Back for Seconds with New Food System Design Challenge

NASA has launched the Deep Space Food Challenge: Mars to Table, a global competition that asks innovators to design a self‑sustaining, Earth‑independent food system for long‑duration missions to the Moon and Mars. The contest, backed by a prize pool of up...

By SpaceDaily
Spire Adds Hyperspectral Sounder and Myriota Payloads on SpaceX Twilight Launch
NewsJan 16, 2026

Spire Adds Hyperspectral Sounder and Myriota Payloads on SpaceX Twilight Launch

Spire Global launched nine satellites on SpaceX’s Twilight mission, featuring its first hyperspectral microwave sounder (HyMS) and eight Myriota IoT payloads. HyMS is designed to deliver high‑resolution temperature, humidity and precipitation profiles, especially in cloudy conditions, to improve numerical weather‑prediction...

By SpaceDaily
Japanese Launch Company Interstellar Technologies Raises $130 Million
NewsJan 16, 2026

Japanese Launch Company Interstellar Technologies Raises $130 Million

Japanese launch startup Interstellar Technologies announced a Series F financing round that raised 20.1 billion yen (about $130 million), nearly doubling its total capital to 44.6 billion yen. The round combined 14.8 billion yen of equity, led by Woven by Toyota, and 5.3 billion yen of...

By SpaceNews
Say Goodbye to Comet 3I/ATLAS! Watch It Head for Interstellar Space in Real-Time with This Free Livestream Today
NewsJan 16, 2026

Say Goodbye to Comet 3I/ATLAS! Watch It Head for Interstellar Space in Real-Time with This Free Livestream Today

Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS, discovered on July 1 2025, is making its final public appearance via a Virtual Telescope Project livestream on Jan 16 2026. After a bright perihelion on Oct 29 2025 and a close Earth flyby on Dec 19 2025, the comet will swing past Jupiter in March 2026...

By Space.com
China's Long March 12B Kerolox Rocket Passes Static Fire
SocialJan 16, 2026

China's Long March 12B Kerolox Rocket Passes Static Fire

And out of nowhere, while Long March 10 series tests are being readied at Wenchang, the reusable Long March 12B has had a successful static fire test today at Jiuquan. This is a kerolox rocket, while the recently debuted 12A...

By Andrew Jones
Ispace Expands to Saudi Arabia as Lunar Race Draws in the Middle East
NewsJan 16, 2026

Ispace Expands to Saudi Arabia as Lunar Race Draws in the Middle East

Japanese lunar explorer ispace announced the formation of a Saudi Arabian subsidiary, following the Saudi‑Japan Ministerial Investment Forum. The company has obtained an Investment Registration Certificate and is completing commercial registration, enabling direct operations in the Kingdom. The new entity...

By Orbital Today
Earth From Space: The Fate of a Giant
NewsJan 16, 2026

Earth From Space: The Fate of a Giant

The A23a iceberg, once the planet's largest floating ice mass, is now showing clear signs of imminent breakup, captured in a cloud‑free Sentinel‑2 image over the South Atlantic. The satellite data reveal fissures and meltwater channels that suggest rapid disintegration....

By European Space Agency News
CesiumAstro Secures $200M Government Financing
NewsJan 16, 2026

CesiumAstro Secures $200M Government Financing

CesiumAstro secured $200 million in government financing, split between a $185 million EXIM‑authorized debt facility and a $15 million revolving‑credit line from JPMorgan. The funding underpins the company’s plan to expand its Texas manufacturing footprint, including a 270,000‑sq‑ft facility slated to start operations...

By Payload
ESA Calls for EO Companies to Join the Insurance Game
NewsJan 16, 2026

ESA Calls for EO Companies to Join the Insurance Game

The European Space Agency (ESA) and Liberty Mutual Reinsurance have launched a three‑year partnership to develop parametric insurance products using satellite Earth observation data. The collaboration will begin with a February workshop where LMRe outlines forestry‑related climate risks and invites...

By Payload
Unlocking Earth’s Secrets Through Hyperspectral Satellite Imaging
NewsJan 16, 2026

Unlocking Earth’s Secrets Through Hyperspectral Satellite Imaging

Hyperspectral satellite imaging is moving from niche scientific missions to commercial constellations, delivering hundreds of narrow spectral bands for every pixel. This capability reveals material composition, enabling early crop disease detection, precise water‑stress mapping, mineral identification, and methane‑leak monitoring. Private...

By New Space Economy
Congress Passes Minibus Spending Bill that Rejects Proposed NASA Cuts
NewsJan 16, 2026

Congress Passes Minibus Spending Bill that Rejects Proposed NASA Cuts

Congress approved a FY2026 minibus appropriations bill that restores NASA funding to $24.438 billion, far exceeding the Trump administration’s $18.8 billion request. The legislation revives the agency’s science budget to $7.25 billion and maintains space‑operations funding near prior levels, while only modestly trimming...

By SpaceNews
Beneath the Ice: Satellites Help Map Antarctica's Subglacial Surface Like Never Before
NewsJan 15, 2026

Beneath the Ice: Satellites Help Map Antarctica's Subglacial Surface Like Never Before

Researchers led by Helen Ockenden used Ice Flow Perturbation Analysis (IFPA) to produce the most detailed satellite‑derived map of Antarctica’s subglacial topography. The model infers bedrock shapes from ice‑surface observations, resolving features between 2 and 30 km and revealing previously unknown...

By Space.com
Diving Catch To Save U.S. Science
BlogJan 15, 2026

Diving Catch To Save U.S. Science

The Senate passed a bipartisan FY 2026 minibus appropriations bill that preserved funding for NASA, the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) after the Trump administration proposed drastic cuts. NASA’s budget was set at...

By NASA Watch
Concordia University Seeks and Gets Injunction Against Polaris Aerospace in ‘Launch the North’ Dispute
NewsJan 15, 2026

Concordia University Seeks and Gets Injunction Against Polaris Aerospace in ‘Launch the North’ Dispute

Concordia University obtained a provisional 10‑day injunction against former student and Polaris Aerospace co‑founder Oleg Khalimonov for allegedly misusing Starsailor project intellectual property in the Department of National Defence’s Launch the North challenge. The Superior Court of Québec ruled Concordia...

By SpaceQ
Lynk Global Tests D2D in Philippines With Smart Communications
NewsJan 15, 2026

Lynk Global Tests D2D in Philippines With Smart Communications

Lynk Global partnered with Smart Communications to test its direct‑to‑device satellite service on Catanduanes, a typhoon‑hit island in the Philippines. The trial successfully sent text messages between a phone on Catanduanes and one in Manila, and enabled two local phones...

By Via Satellite
Sodern Execs Detail Expansion to Establish Star Tracker Manufacturing in US
NewsJan 15, 2026

Sodern Execs Detail Expansion to Establish Star Tracker Manufacturing in US

French space‑optics leader Sodern announced the creation of Sodern America, a Colorado‑based subsidiary that will manufacture its flagship Auriga star trackers and test the high‑performance Hydra units. The company hired veteran space executive Tiphaine Louradour as CEO to lead the...

By Via Satellite
Red Dwarfs Are Too Dim To Generate Complex Life
NewsJan 15, 2026

Red Dwarfs Are Too Dim To Generate Complex Life

A new study examines whether planets orbiting dim red dwarfs can trigger a Great Oxidation Event (GOE) like Earth’s. Using TRAPPIST‑1e as a proxy, the authors find it receives only 0.9% of Earth’s photosynthetically active radiation, implying a 63‑billion‑year timescale...

By Universe Today
Welcome Home, NASA’s SpaceX Crew 11.
PodcastJan 15, 202627 min

Welcome Home, NASA’s SpaceX Crew 11.

The episode recaps NASA’s SpaceX Crew‑11 splashdown after a five‑month ISS stint and discusses recent industry moves, including Slingshot Aerospace’s $27 million US Space Force contract for AI‑driven space‑warfare training, CAS Space’s debut of a suborbital two‑stage research rocket, and collaborations...

By T-Minus Space Daily
Hidden Magma Oceans Could Shield Rocky Exoplanets From Harmful Radiation
NewsJan 15, 2026

Hidden Magma Oceans Could Shield Rocky Exoplanets From Harmful Radiation

Researchers at the University of Rochester have identified deep basal magma oceans (BMOs) inside super‑Earths as a novel source of planetary magnetic fields. Laboratory laser‑shock experiments and quantum‑mechanical simulations show that molten rock under extreme pressure becomes highly conductive, sustaining...

By Phys.org - Space News
Arianespace to Begin Amazon Leo Launches in February
NewsJan 15, 2026

Arianespace to Begin Amazon Leo Launches in February

Arianespace will launch the first 32 Amazon Leo satellites on Feb. 12, marking the debut of the Ariane 64, the Ariane 6 variant with four solid‑rocket boosters. The mission initiates a 2022 contract for 18 Amazon launches, positioning Amazon as Arianespace’s largest commercial...

By SpaceNews
Cyberthieves Hit European Space Agency, Stealing Hundreds of Gigabytes of Data
NewsJan 15, 2026

Cyberthieves Hit European Space Agency, Stealing Hundreds of Gigabytes of Data

European Space Agency (ESA) disclosed that it has been hit by successive cyber‑attacks, resulting in the theft of over 700 GB of data, including proprietary software, credentials, and mission documentation. The first leak, attributed to hacker “888,” exposed more than 200 GB,...

By Space.com
NASA‘s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS)
NewsJan 15, 2026

NASA‘s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS)

NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program has transitioned the agency from spacecraft builder to customer, using a $2.6 billion IDIQ contract to purchase lunar‑surface delivery from private vendors. After mixed results in 2024, the initiative achieved its first reliable commercial...

By New Space Economy
Reserve a Moon Hotel Room for $1 Million
SocialJan 15, 2026

Reserve a Moon Hotel Room for $1 Million

This company will now let you spend $1,000,000 to reserve a hotel room on the Moon, yes seriously… #space #moon #science #physics #astrokobi

By Kobi Brown
Senate Approves Minibus Bill Covering CJS and NASA
SocialJan 15, 2026

Senate Approves Minibus Bill Covering CJS and NASA

The Senate has passed the minibus that includes CJS, which in turn includes NASA. Now to the President.

By Marcia Smith
Antarctic Submillimeter Telescope Enables More Complete View of the Carbon Cycle in Star-Forming Regions
NewsJan 15, 2026

Antarctic Submillimeter Telescope Enables More Complete View of the Carbon Cycle in Star-Forming Regions

Chinese researchers used the 60‑cm Antarctic Terahertz Explorer (ATE60) at Dome A to capture submillimeter emissions from carbon’s ionized, atomic and molecular phases in two massive star‑forming regions. The study achieved the first complete carbon‑phase inventory, revealing unusually high atomic‑carbon‑to‑CO ratios....

By Phys.org - Space News
China Launches Ceres‑1 From Barge, Deploying Four Satellites
SocialJan 15, 2026

China Launches Ceres‑1 From Barge, Deploying Four Satellites

China's 2nd launch of the day & 4th of the year: a Ceres-1 solid rocket lifted off from a barge off the coast of Shandong province at 2010 UTC (Jan. 15), successfully sending 4 Tianqi Constellation satellites into 850 km,...

By Andrew Jones
Eutelsat Secures Multi‑Launch Deal with Maia Space for OneWeb
SocialJan 15, 2026

Eutelsat Secures Multi‑Launch Deal with Maia Space for OneWeb

.@Eutelsat signs multi-launch contract w/ startup @MaiaSpaceOff for launches of OneWeb satellites starting in 2027. Maia says contract can secure the majority of its order book for 2027-2029. @Armees_Gouv @CNES @esa @AirbusSpace. https://t.co/LChx5fuH4S https://t.co/bj85cV7pwa

By Peter B. de Selding
These Gravitationally Lensed Supernovae Could Resolve The Hubble Tension
NewsJan 15, 2026

These Gravitationally Lensed Supernovae Could Resolve The Hubble Tension

Astronomers using JWST’s VENUS survey have identified two strongly‑lensed supernovae, SN Ares and SN Athena, whose multiple images arrive at different times. The predicted reappearances—Athena in 2–3 years and Ares in about 60 years—provide a natural time‑delay experiment to measure the Hubble...

By Universe Today
Arianespace Schedules 7-8 Ariane 6 Launches, Amazon
SocialJan 15, 2026

Arianespace Schedules 7-8 Ariane 6 Launches, Amazon

.@Arianespace plans 7-8 Ariane 6 launches this year, including 2-3 for @Amazonleo, the first in Feb; waiting on @defis_eu #Iris2 schedule and details of @BMVg_Bundeswehr constellation. @EutelsatGroup. https://t.co/HS7JE8spxw https://t.co/XoYUqcJMvK

By Peter B. de Selding
Lockheed Martin and General Electric Complete Tests of a Rotating-Detonation Engine
NewsJan 15, 2026

Lockheed Martin and General Electric Complete Tests of a Rotating-Detonation Engine

Lockheed Martin and GE Aerospace announced successful tests of a liquid‑fuel rotating‑detonation ramjet (RDR) designed for hypersonic missiles. The joint effort proved the engine can generate high thrust at super‑ and hypersonic speeds while being smaller and lighter than conventional...

By Behind the Black