Liftoff

Liftoff is a podcast about space, the universe, and everything. You don’t need to be a rocket scientist to understand the major developments as explained by enthusiastic space fans Stephen Hackett and Jason Snell. Hosted by Jason Snell and Stephen Hackett.

https://www.relay.fm/liftoff

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episode 163: What Does it Look Like Under the Bus?


Artemis' 2024 lunar landing is officially off the table. Russia has shot one of its own satellites down, leading to emergency procedures being carried out at the ISS.

Yeah, not a great week in space.

This episode of Liftoff is sponsored by:
  • LinkedIn Jobs: Post a job for free by visiting this link.
  • The Intrazone, by Microsoft SharePoint: Your bi-weekly conversation and interview podcast about SharePoint, OneDrive and related tech within Microsoft 365.
Links and Show Notes: Support Liftoff with a Relay FM Membership Not Saying it was Aliens, but 'Oumuamua Probably Wasn't a Nitrogen Iceberg... - Universe Today Low-Earth Orbit Flight Test of an Inflatable Decelerator (LOFTID) | NASA Practice Makes Perfect: Simulating Separation in Near Zero Gravity | NASA Maybe It's a Lost Piece of the Moon, but Don't Call It a Moon - The New York Times Crew Dragon lands safely, despite one parachute inflating slowly [Updated] | Ars Technica NASA’s DART Preps for Launch in First Planetary Defense Test Mission | NASA Eric Berger on Twitter: "If the review is favorable, this means that there's a pretty reasonable chance that Starship and Super Heavy will make their first orbital launch attempt during the first quarter of 2022." The Space Review: Resetting Artemis Blue Origin loses lawsuit against federal government over NASA’s human lunar lander contracts - The Verge NASA delays Moon landings, says Blue Origin legal tactics partly to blame | Ars Technica NASA delays ambitious human lunar landing to 2025 - The Verge NASA will spend $93 billion on Artemis moon program by 2025, report estimates | Space Russia blows up a satellite, creating a dangerous debris cloud in space - The Verge Russia may have just shot down its own satellite, creating a huge debris cloud [Updated] | Ars Technica NASA Administrator Statement on Russian ASAT Test | NASA Russia acknowledges anti-satellite test, but says it’s no big deal | Ars Technica The Darkest Timeline Theory on Russia


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 November 16, 2021  40m