Astrobotic is looking at a Dec. 4, 2025-March 4, 2026, window for launching its Griffin Mission 1 to the south polar region of the moon, it said in an FCC Space Bureau application posted Tuesday. It said GM-1 would deliver NASA and commercial payloads for a lunar surface mission. The total mission would be at most 28 days, including five days on the lunar surface. GM-1 would be decommissioned on the moon's surface and not return, Astrobotic said. The spacecraft would operate in the X band and use the S band for short-range communications between the lander and the rover on the lunar surface, it said.
The FCC Space and Wireless bureaus' grant of a waiver to SpaceX for its supplemental coverage from space (SCS) service unreasonably put the burden on EchoStar to protect itself from any interference, EchoStar said this week in an application for review. The waiver, granted last month, covered the aggregate out-of-band power flux density limits that the FCC adopted in its 2024 SCS order and requires that SpaceX address any interference that happens (see 2503070030). EchoStar said the bureaus never showed that the FCC's concerns underlying its emissions limit rule had changed, gone away or become unlikely. It said the Communications Act gives the FCC the task of preventing interference, not addressing it after the fact. It asked that the full commission reverse the bureaus' waiver.
Airbus will add satellite-delivered connectivity from Amazon's Kuiper system to its in-flight connectivity offering, the aircraft maker said Tuesday.
Viasat said Monday it had signed an agreement with Telesat that will see Ka-band capacity from Telesat's Lightspeed low earth orbit constellation integrated into Viasat's multi-orbit network. Telesat said its capacity will be used in such markets as aviation, maritime and defense. The thousands of aircraft with Viasat GM-40 antennas will be able to access the Lightspeed network when global services start in late 2027, it said.
Impulse Space is aiming to launch the Impulse-3 orbital transfer vehicle (OTV) later this year, it told the FCC Space Bureau in an application posted Monday. It said Impulse-3 -- its third OTV mission -- will deploy up to four third-party satellites and host six non-deployable payloads. The mission is also intended to demonstrate on-orbit maneuvering capabilities. Impulse-3 will operate in the S and X bands, the company added.
Saying Amazon gave no advance word of its plans to launch its first batch of Kuiper satellites Wednesday (see 2504020044), EchoStar's Hughes is asking for more time to submit the technical demonstration that the FCC requires, showing how Hughes will protect those non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) satellites from interference from its Jupiter 3 satellite. In an FCC Space Bureau waiver request posted Monday, Hughes asked for 40 additional days. Hughes said a condition of Jupiter 3's license is that 60 days before the initial scheduled launch of a new U.S. NGSO fixed satellite service system, Hughes either has to complete coordination with that NGSO operator or submit the technical demonstration. Hughes and Amazon are in coordination discussions, the filing said, but the additional time will let Hughes either complete that coordination or file its technical demonstration.
Competition to provide satcom services to the U.S. government is heated and intensifying, SES and Intelsat said in a redacted version of a memo submitted in January to DOJ's antitrust division. The white paper, posted Monday in docket 24-267, argued for the necessity of SES' planned purchase of Intelsat, announced 12 months ago (see 2404300048). The two companies said that with the government vertical already being intensively competitive, SES/Intelsat "poses no threat to competition." Rather, with SpaceX's proposed Starshield program of satellites built for government users and other low earth orbit constellations having competitive advantage, concerns about SES/Intelsat lessening competition in satcom "overstate the potential impact of the Proposed Transaction on the Government vertical," they said. The combination will give the U.S. government "an even more reliable partner and supplier that offers a resilient, secure, highly capable and seamless satellite network operating in multiple orbits and frequency bands."
The orbital debris mass in low earth orbit is increasingly dominated by Chinese rocket upper stages, space security consultant Jim Shell wrote Friday. After launches that started in 2024 for the Thousand Sails and Hulianwang W. Digui mega constellations, rocket upper stages for both are being left in high-altitude orbits with orbital lifetimes of more than 100 years, he said. That's contrary to accepted norms, he said. It's expected there will be more than 1,000 Chinese launches over the next several years deploying the constellations, he said.
California launch technology startup SpinLaunch unveiled plans Thursday for a low earth orbit microsatellite broadband constellation. It also announced a $12 million investment from Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace for the constellation's development and commercialization. SpinLaunch said an in-orbit demonstration is planned for 2026.
The initial group of Amazon's Kuiper satellites is set for launch April 9 on a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket, Amazon said Wednesday. The 27 Kuipers will be deployed at an altitude of 450 kilometers, it added. Amazon expects to offer commercial satellite broadband service later this year, the company said, calling the 27 satellites "a significant upgrade" from the prototypes launched in 2023 (see 2310110007). Amazon said the satellites are coated in a mirror film that scatters reflected sunlight to make them less visible to ground-based astronomers. In the next several years, there are seven more Kuiper launches planned on Atlas V, along with 38 launches on ULA's larger Vulcan Centaur rocket and 30-plus launches by Arianespace, Blue Origin and SpaceX.