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Busy week for SpaceX — across funding, space tourism and next-gen spacecraft
There also a space station resupply mission coming up that it getting ready for, and signs (this time literally) continue to suggest that
its first human spaceflight mission is imminent.
Lots of other news, too, including our own: We announced this week that NASA Administrator
Jim Bridenstine is going to be our guest onstage at TC Sessions: Space coming up in June.
Farewell to a legend
Katherine Johnson, a
mathematician who defied prejudice in the &50s and &60s to help NASA send the first men to the moon, has died at the age of 101
She was a pioneer, a role model and an instrumental part of America space program, and she will be dearly missed.
SpaceX plans to build
Starships at a furious clip
SpaceX is serious about iteration — its strategy of building (and failing — and learning from its
failures) fast is in full effect for its Starship development program
Elon Musk said on Twitter this week that the plan is to build them as frequently as possible with significant improvements between each
successive spacecraft, with the aim of going through two or three iterations before flying an orbital mission later this year.
SpaceX
seeking $250 million in new funding
The still-private SpaceX is going back to investors for more cash, likely to help it with the expensive
proposition of building a bunch of Starships in rapid succession essentially by hand
It said to be seeking $250 million in a round that could close as early as mid-March, according to a CNBC report.
SpaceX finds an
experienced partner for Crew Dragon space tourism
One side of SpaceX business that isn&t necessarily as obvious as its commercial cargo
launch services is the space tourism angle
This week, the company announced a partnership with Space Adventures, the same firm that has arranged paid trips to the Space Station for
private citizens aboard Soyuz capsules
The first of these trips, which won&t go to the ISS but instead will fly up to a higher orbit, take a trip around Earth and come back, is
set to take off as early as next year
And if you have to ask about the price, you probably can&t afford it.
New platform headed to the ISS in March
The ISS gets a new platform
next month that can support attached payloads — up to a dozen — from research partners, including academic institutions and private
It&ll go up aboard SpaceX next resupply mission for the station, which is currently targeting liftoff on March 2
Also, Adidas is sending up a machine that makes its BOOST shoe soles, just to see how it works in space.
Japan is going to get and return a
soil sample from a Mars moon
Japan is sending a mission to Phobos and Deimos to study the two moons of Mars, using a probe that will orbit
the Red Planet natural satellites loaded with sensors
It&ll also carry a small lander, that will itself deploy an even smaller rover, which will study the surface of Phobos directly
If all goes to plan, it&ll collect a sample and bring that back to Earth for further study here.
SpaceX talent is fueling the LA startup
ecosystem
It turns out that SpaceX, not Snap, may be the most important young technology company for developing the Los Angeles startup
Jon Shieber documents how SpaceX alum have gone forth and built a number of companies in the area that have gone on to raise big cash, as
well as very young startups that have had a promising beginning
Extra Crunch subscription required.
Meanwhile, in Canada
Yes, LA has a bustling space tech ecosystem
But communications satellite startup Kepler calls Canada home, and it recently made the interesting decision to build its small satellites
in-house — in its own facility in downtown Toronto
Founder and CEO Mina Mitry tells me why that the best choice for his company
Extra Crunch subscription required.