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SpaceX

Helmed by billionaire CEO Elon Musk, SpaceX has made a name for itself as a leading rocket launch provider. We bring you complete coverage of the company’s Falcon 9 rocket launches and landings, as well as SpaceX’s more ambitious exploration goals. That includes flying people around the Moon in the company’s Dragon capsule and starting a human colony on Mars.

The EPA cracked down on Tesla and SpaceX — then DOGE took over

DOGE is gutting the agency that enforces environmental laws Elon Musk’s companies have been accused of breaking.

Justine Calma
Wes Davis
Wes Davis
AP photos of Starlink at the GSA show how DOGE bypasses normal systems.

After finding the Elon Musk-owned Starlink’s terminals on the roof of the General Services Administration — which a law professor quoted by The Associated Press called a “choke point for all agencies” — federal staffers had concerns.

IT staffers, who reported the discovery to superiors, were concerned that the devices were not authorized to be used at GSA and DOGE might be utilizing them to siphon off agency data...

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Europe is trying to leave Starlink behind.

Through the lens of the war between Ukraine and Russia, The Wall Street Journal writes about Europe’s need to replace Starlink, with one quote neatly summing up why:

“If you put all your eggs in an American basket, it will not be good for Italy,” said Christophe Grudler, a French member of the European Parliament. “Imagine if tomorrow Musk says: I want to cut the signal to Italy.”

But one possible alternative, Europe’s Eutelsat, would likely “need billions of dollars in funding” to compete.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Is Elon Musk in the room with us now?

Trump’s pick to lead NASA, Jared Isaacman, found it strangely difficult to tell his Senate confirmation hearing whether Elon Musk was part of his job interview or not. That’s odd, because he must have met Musk — Isaacman funded, and flew on, two private spaceflights using Musk’s SpaceX craft.

Isaacman says Mars will be NASA’s new priority if he’s in charge. Strangely enough, that’s where SpaceX is putting its money too.

Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
How astronomers cope with all those Starlink satellites.

SpaceX has launched over 7,000 low earth satellites that have disrupted astronomical observations. Another 70,000 LEO satellites are expected to launch before 2031 from SpaceX and its competitors including three 10,000 mega-constellations originating from China. Scientific American explores how astronomers are dealing with the challenge and planning for the future.

A multi-exposure image shows streaks from Starlink satellites, the International Space Station and other satellites over Wales.
A multi-exposure image shows streaks from Starlink satellites, the International Space Station and other satellites over Wales.
Image: Scientific American
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
SpaceX Crew-9 and the Boeing Starliner astronauts have landed safely.

Right on schedule, the Dragon capsule deployed its parachutes and landed off the coast of Florida as recovery crews began the process of bringing the capsule onboard a recovery ship and extracting its crew.

Dragon spacecraft floating in the ocean with speedboats approaching.
Image: NASA (YouTube)
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
The Crew-9 return mission has completed its deorbit burn.

The Dragon spacecraft is fewer than 20 minutes out from splashdown in Florida. As noted on NASA’s livestream, it has completed the deorbit burn that lasted about seven and a half minutes at 5:18PM ET, and is entering a period of communications blackout as they reenter Earth’s atmosphere.

Its drogue parachutes will deploy four minutes before splashdown, beginning the process of slowing it down from 350 miles per hour before its targeted landing at about 5:57PM ET.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
The Starliner astronauts are on their way back to Earth.

Last night, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, along with Crew-9 members Aleksandr Gorbunov and Nick Hague, left the ISS in a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft now that the Crew-10 mission has arrived to relieve them. NASA will resume coverage of their return mission this afternoon, as they are expected to splash down off the coast of Florida at about 5:57PM ET, ending a voyage that started last June.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Watch NASA’s Starliner astronauts greet the Crew-10 mission that will relieve them.

Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams will soon return to Earth — following an unexpectedly long stay in space due to issues with Boeing’s Starliner craft — after the Crew-10 mission’s SpaceX Dragon capsule docked with the International Space Station early this morning.

Here, in a video shared by NASA, the newcomers are greeted by the ISS crew. NASA said Friday that Wilmore, Williams, and two others “will return to Earth no earlier than Wednesday, March 19.”

Marina Galperina
Marina Galperina
SpaceX Crew-10 has launched.

SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket lifted off on schedule in its second attempt Friday night, sending the Crew-10 mission on its way to the International Space Station.

Image: NASA (YouTube)
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Hatch door closed, again.

Time for the second launch attempt of Crew-10.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
The Crew-10 astronauts have returned to the launchpad.

Commander Anne McClain, pilot Nichole Ayers, pilot, along with mission specialists Takuya Onishi and Kirill Peskov are back in the Dragon spacecraft, ahead of the mission’s launch, which is scheduled for 7:03PM ET.

According to NASA, once the craft takes off, it will be about 28.5 hours before it meets up with the ISS.

Crew-10 astronauts inside the Dragon capsule on March 14th.
Crew-10 astronauts inside the Dragon capsule awaiting launch.
Image: NASA (YouTube)
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 mission is scheduled for launch, again.

Now that SpaceX ground teams have “successfully flushed a suspected pocket of trapped air” in the ground support hydraulics system used for the clamp arm supporting the Falcon 9 rocket, there will be another attempt to launch the Crew-10 mission to the ISS tonight, after the first one on Wednesday was scrubbed.

It’s scheduled for 7:03PM ET on Friday, March 14th, and once it reaches the space station, that will mean it’s time for Crew-9 and the stranded Boeing Starliner astronauts to make their way back to Earth, which could happen as soon as March 19th.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company’s Dragon spacecraft on top on the launch pad.
Image: NASA / SpaceX
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 mission won’t launch tonight.

With less than an hour to go on the countdown, NASA announced tonight’s launch attempt to send a capsule to the ISS on a Falcon 9 rocket is off. There is a backup lunch opportunity already scheduled for tomorrow night, on March 13th at 7:26PM ET, but it hasn’t been confirmed yet.

Tweet from @NASA: NASA and SpaceX are standing down on the March 12 launch attempt. Watch the mission blog for updates, including a revised launch date and time.
Screenshot @NASA (Twitter)
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
The Crew-10 launch approaches, and Dragon’s hatch is closed.

The latest update about the status of the Crew-10 launch scheduled for 7:48PM ET shows the view from inside the capsule as the hatch door closed.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
SpaceX’s 8th Starship flight test ends in another explosion.

SpaceX recently listed some explanations for how its seventh Starship flight test ended, and now another report is coming. Flight 8’s launch and Super Heavy booster rocket separation was successful, with the booster returning to the pad.

However, before reaching the engine cutoff point nearly nine minutes into the flight, the Starship began to tumble, then exploded (according to SpaceX, “...experienced a rapid unscheduled disassembly and contact was lost”) without attempting its planned payload deploy demo.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Starlink could be eligible for more rural broadband funding.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick plans to make an internet infrastructure investment program “technology-neutral,” according to The Wall Street Journal, meaning Elon Musk’s Starlink could more easily benefit. The program currently favors investment in fiber.

Umar Shakir
Umar Shakir
SpaceX’s next Starship test flight has been delayed again.

SpaceX called off Starship’s eighth flight test yesterday after the countdown timer was put on hold at T-minus 40 seconds to resolve issues with the Super Heavy booster. The new launch will happen as soon as Wednesday, March 5th.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The DOJ is moving to drop its SpaceX lawsuit.

Reuters has a good summary of what’s going on. The Department of Justice initially sued SpaceX in 2023 over alleged hiring discrimination.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Wernher Von Braun cosplayer calls actual astronaut a slur.

Elon Musk, the US’s would-be dictator, isn’t content with lying about the Boeing Starliner astronauts, who unexpectedly spent much longer in space than they planned after the Boeing craft had thruster failures. When Andreas Morgensen, a Danish astronaut, called the lies what they were, Musk replied with offensive name-calling.

Can anyone stop President Musk?

A republic, if you can keep it.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Pixel 9 gets a second satellite option.

According to Android Police, T-Mobile has added Google’s latest phones to its beta test of direct-to-cell satellite service powered by SpaceX’s Starlink. iPhones and a select few Samsung phones were already in the beta.

The Pixel 9 series also has Google’s own Satellite SOS, which is only designed for emergency messaging. T-Mobile’s beta adds full SMS support, with voice and data planned in the future — while Europe might get full satellite broadband this year.

Adi Robertson
Adi Robertson
Elon Musk saying he’ll ‘bring home’ two astronauts for Trump is as dumb as it sounds.

Ars Technica explains why even as off-the-cuff maybe-trolling, Musk’s recent comments about the ISS crew put a strain on NASA. Here’s the crux:

The “stranded” astronauts on the space station probably could come home as early as next week. But if they were to do so, it would create a lot of headaches for NASA, its international partners, and probably even for Musk’s human spaceflight team at SpaceX.