V The Earth Observation Market and Regulation: Instruments for Growth Via Satellite / Helen Mendonca / 13d ago JUN 02
S Stonehenge is widely known as one of the oldest monumental stone structures in the world, but hunter-gatherer societies in southeastern Turkey built circles of T-shaped limestone pillars 6,000 years earlier, weighing up to 50 tonnes each and predating the human invention of agriculture by approximately 4,000 years Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02
S The importance of determining an equilibrium state for space traffic management SpaceNews / Marshall H. Kaplan / 13d ago JUN 02
S Massive boom over northeastern US was a meteor explosion as powerful as 300 tons of TNT, NASA confirms Space.com / Elizabeth Howell / 13d ago JUN 02
Northrop Grumman Taps Apex for Golden Dome SBI Collab Payload / Douglas Gorman / 13d ago Satellite Manufacturing Space Propulsion JUN 02
S UK explores Vast space station mission for astronaut with physical disability SpaceNews / Jason Rainbow / 13d ago JUN 02
Impulse Space Closes $500M Series D Payload / Jacqueline Feldscher / 13d ago Satellite Manufacturing Space Transportation & Logistics JUN 02
Impulse Space raises $500 million SpaceNews / Jeff Foust / 13d ago Satellite Manufacturing Space Transportation & Logistics JUN 02
S Drifting through the Milky Way may be billions — perhaps even trillions — of rogue planets: worlds with no sun of their own, some flung from the systems where they formed, now wandering the galaxy in darkness. Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02
S Microsoft is canceling Claude Code licenses across its Experiences + Devices division by June 30, steering thousands of engineers toward GitHub Copilot, while Uber burned through its entire 2026 AI tools budget on Claude Code and Cursor in just four months — and Opus 4.8 launched into that exact crisis Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02
Voyager to acquire lunar lander developer Astrobotic SpaceNews / Jeff Foust / 13d ago Space Stations & Habitats Space Defense Systems JUN 02
S Researchers call for regulations to protect low Earth orbit environment SpaceNews / Leonard David / 13d ago JUN 02
SpaceX’s Initial Public Offering of Stock: A Prospectus on the Future Inside Outer Space / Leonard David / 13d ago Launch Services Satellite Communications JUN 02
S A single cumulus cloud — the kind that looks like a fluffy white pillow drifting across a summer sky — typically contains hundreds of tons of water by weight, suspended in the air because the water droplets are small enough that air resistance keeps them aloft against the pull of gravity Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02
S Supermassive black holes are pointing jets of plasma directly at Earth — and a population of them may have produced the highest-energy neutrino ever recorded Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02
S On a sunny day, the top of the Eiffel Tower slowly drifts in a small circle about six inches wide — it isn’t the wind, it’s the sun, heating one side of the iron at a time and making the whole tower lean a little away from whichever side is warmest Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02
N Spacewalking With Scott Wray, Artemis EVA Training Lead NASA Breaking News / Linda E. Grimm / 13d ago JUN 02
S Sound travels about four times faster underwater than it does through air — which is why whale songs can travel hundreds of miles across the ocean, and why early submarine sonar operators sometimes picked up the calls of distant whales communicating from hundreds of miles away Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02
S Oxford University is older than the Aztec Empire — teaching at Oxford began in 1096, while the Aztec capital Tenochtitlán was founded in 1325, which means Oxford was already more than two centuries old by the time the civilization that built one of the most sophisticated cities of the medieval world had even begun Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02
S NASA abandons ‘core module’ concept for commercial space station development SpaceNews / Jeff Foust / 13d ago JUN 02
S Parts of Canada are quietly short on gravity. The standard story blames an ice sheet that pressed the crust down and vanished thousands of years ago, but satellites suggest that explains less than half of it. The rest comes from something churning far deeper in the mantle. Space Daily / Space Daily Editorial Team / 13d ago JUN 02