Hyperbola is launching to the Oort cloud for a week’s R&R from today and will be returning via Daejeon, Korea from the 12 October. In Daejeon Hyperbola will be blogging from the International Astronautical Congress, where the world’s space community meets. And yes there may even be Virgin Galactic news there…
Hyperbola launching to Oort cloud, returning via Daejeon, Korea
by Rob Coppinger | Oct 2, 2009 | Commercial human spaceflight, commercial launch services, Constellation, COTS, ESA, exploration, History, International Space Station, JAXA, NASA, Personal spaceflight, Russia, Satellites, Soyuz, space station, Space tourism, Spaceport, Suborbital, Technology, Virgin Galactic | 0 comments
About Seradata
Seradata produce the renowned Seradata database. Trusted by over 100 of the world’s leading Space organisations, Seradata is a fully queryable database used for market analysis, failure/risk assessment, spectrum analysis and space situational awareness (SSA).
For more information go to https://www.seradata.com/product/
Related Articles
Global Fixed Service Satellite (FSS) operator Viasat Inc has closed its long awaited acquisition of Inmarsat, a British satellite telecommunications Read more
A Falcon 9v1.2FT Block 5 rocket was launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California at 0602 GMT on 31 Read more
North Korea attempted to orbit a military reconnaissance satellite Malligyeong-1 using its new Chollima-1 rocket from a pad at the Read more
Australian newspace company Fleet Space Technologies has secured AUS $50 million (US $33 million) in a Series C fundraising round Read more
Commercial space station operator Vast has signed a contract with SpaceX for the launches of its first space station and Read more
I-Space (Japan) has reported the results of its investigation into the landing failure of its HAKUTO M1 lunar lander on Read more
A Long March 2F/G (Y16) launched Shenzhou 16 with three Chinese astronauts ("Taikonauts") on board on their way to the Read more
An Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) GSLV Mk II rocket (GSLV 2 CUSP 4) was successfully launched from Satish Dhawan Read more
Recent Posts
- Opinion: There are warnings from the present and from the past about AI computers
- Viasat completes US$6.3 billion Inmarsat acquisition in a major satcom merger
- Falcon 9 launches from Vandenberg with 52 Starlink Group 2-10 satellites aboard
- North Korean Chollima-1 maiden launch ends in second stage failure – sets off neighbours’ alarms
- Fleet Space raises US$33 million for satellite enabled mineral exploration