transportation:spacecraft
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| transportation:spacecraft [2026/03/06 21:36] – [DART] timb | transportation:spacecraft [2026/03/13 00:14] (current) – [DART] timb | ||
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| + | == Space Force Makes the Obvious Choice, Halts Rocket Launches at Boeing' | ||
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| + | March 08, 2026 06:26 am EDT - Rich Smith for The Motley Fool | ||
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| + | Key Points | ||
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| + | - United Launch Alliance' | ||
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| + | - The Space Force has decided two is too many and is pausing launches while searching for a fix. | ||
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| + | - What does it mean for Boeing and Lockheed Martin, the two major investors in the ULA? | ||
| + | 10 stocks we like better than Lockheed Martin › | ||
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| + | United Launch Alliance had high hopes for its new Vulcan Centaur rocket, but they' | ||
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| + | As recently as two years ago, United Launch Alliance (ULA), the space launch venture jointly owned by Boeing (NYSE: BA) and Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT), had hoped to be launching anywhere from 20 to 30 Vulcans annually by now. It's actually launched just four times in two years. | ||
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| + | Worse, as I described last month, two of the four Vulcans ULA has managed to launch experienced anomalies during flight. Although Vulcan' | ||
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| + | Launch 3 then proceeded nominally in 2025, only to be followed by Launch 4 in February 2026 -- which had another problem with its solid rocket boosters. Nothing fell off this time, but the engine exhaust apparently burned through the booster nozzle this time, again endangering the spacecraft. | ||
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| + | == NASA will try its Artemis II launch again in early April == | ||
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| + | The agency anticipates about four launch opportunities between April 1 and 6. | ||
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| + | Will Shanklin - Thu, March 12, 2026 at 1:57 PM PDT | ||
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| + | NASA will soon give it another go on April Fools' Day. On Thursday, NASA said it's targeting April 1 at 6:24 PM ET for the Artemis II mission' | ||
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| + | In case that date doesn' | ||
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| + | In preparation, | ||
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| + | == NASA's DART spacecraft changed a binary asteroid' | ||
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| + | The mission targeted the smaller asteroid of the pair, but ultimately affected the trajectory of both, new research shows. | ||
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| + | Cheyenne MacDonald - Sat, March 7, 2026 at 1:05 PM PST | ||
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| + | When NASA crashed a spacecraft into the asteroid moonlet Dimorphos in 2022, it altered both Dimorphos' | ||
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| + | The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission was designed to demonstrate one possible way of deflecting such an object, targeting the non-threatening moonlet Dimorphos, which is about 560 feet wide. NASA quickly declared it a success after its initial analysis showed the planned collision shortened Dimorphos' | ||
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| + | == NASA’s DART spacecraft changed an asteroid’s orbit around the sun == | ||
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| + | Studying this asteroid could help protect Earth from future asteroid strikes | ||
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| + | Lisa Grossman - March 6, 2026 at 2:00 pm | ||
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| + | A spacecraft slowed the orbit of a pair of asteroids around the sun by more than 10 micrometers per second — the first time human activity has altered the orbit of a celestial object, researchers report March 6 in Science Advances. The experiment could have implications for protecting Earth from future asteroid strikes. | ||
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| + | NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test, or DART, intentionally crashed a spacecraft into the small asteroid Dimorphos in 2022. The goal was to change Dimorphos’ orbit around its larger sibling, Didymos. Within a month, researchers showed that the impact shortened Dimorphos’ 12-hour orbit by 32 minutes. | ||
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transportation/spacecraft.1772832995.txt.gz · Last modified: by timb
