Space Tech Digest — 2026-06-10
NASA names four astronauts for Artemis III lunar test flight targeting 2027, marking a major milestone toward human Moon returns. Blue Origin clears regulatory hurdles for military contracts despite recent launchpad setback. Meanwhile, NASA's Psyche probe captures stunning Mars imagery during gravity-assist flyby en route to a metal-rich asteroid.
Space Tech Digest — 2026-06-10
Launch & Mission Updates
Artemis III Crew Selection
- Vehicle: Space Launch System (SLS) with Orion capsule
- Status: Crew named; mission targeting 2027
- Details: NASA announced four astronauts for Artemis III on June 9: Randy Bresnik, Luca Parmitano, Frank Rubio, and Andre Douglas. This crewed test flight will demonstrate critical lunar landing systems in Earth orbit before the planned 2028 Moon landing (Artemis IV). The mission represents a major step in NASA's program to return humans to the lunar surface.

NASA Psyche Mars Flyby Delivers Stunning Images
- Vehicle: Psyche spacecraft (JPL/ASA mission)
- Status: Completed Mars gravity-assist on May 15
- Details: Psyche executed a precision Mars flyby at 2,864 miles altitude, capturing detailed crescent images of the Red Planet and heavily cratered terrain. The gravity assist boosted the spacecraft's speed by ~1,000 mph, propelling it deeper into space toward its target: the rare metal-rich asteroid 16 Psyche, where it will study composition and structure of this unusual world.

Commercial Space
- Blue Origin Clears Military Certification: Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin remains eligible to bid for U.S. Space Force national security launch contracts after last week's launchpad explosion, the Air Force's acquisition division confirmed on June 4. The company retains competitive standing alongside SpaceX and ULA for lucrative missions. Earlier in April, the Space Force awarded the three companies combined contracts worth $13.7 billion for national security launches between 2027–2032, with additional slots available for Rocket Lab and Stoke Space.
Science & Discovery
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James Webb Detects Methane on Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS: NASA's James Webb Space Telescope collected its first mid-infrared chemical fingerprint of an interstellar visitor, comet 3I/ATLAS. Observations from December 2025 reveal a composition unlike any comet in our Solar System, showing the presence of methane ice and other exotic ices. This discovery expands our understanding of how volatile compounds form in different stellar environments.
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Webb Discovers Exoplanet with Disappearing Rock Clouds: The James Webb Space Telescope identified a bizarre daily weather cycle on exoplanet WASP-94A b, located ~700 light-years away. Morning mineral clouds composed of rock-like materials vanish by nightfall, a phenomenon never before observed. This discovery reveals exotic atmospheric dynamics on distant worlds and demonstrates JWST's capability to study exoplanet weather patterns in unprecedented detail.

Upcoming Launch Schedule
| Date | Vehicle | Payload | Site |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 10–14 | SpaceX Falcon 9 | Starlink constellation | CCSFS / VSFB |
| June 10–14 | Rocket Lab Electron | Classified hypersonic test | Mahia, NZ |
| June 10–14 | Chinese rockets | Four orbital missions | Multiple sites |
What to Watch This Week
- SpaceX's multi-launch week: Three Starlink missions scheduled for June 10–14 from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and Vandenberg Space Force Base; expect predawn and evening launches.
- Rocket Lab's classified mission: The company returns to launch cadence with a secretive hypersonic test vehicle flight, part of broader space competition.
- Artemis III logistics: Watch for NASA announcements on SLS readiness and Orion capsule testing as the 2027 mission enters final preparation phase.
Sources compiled from NASA, SpaceNews, The New York Times, BBC Science, ScienceDaily, Bloomberg, and official mission updates.
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