space industry – TheNewsHub https://thenewshub.in Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:43:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7 Rocket Lab stock pops 25% after company reports strong revenue growth, first Neutron deal https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/12/rocket-lab-stock-pops-25-after-company-reports-strong-revenue-growth-first-neutron-deal/ https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/12/rocket-lab-stock-pops-25-after-company-reports-strong-revenue-growth-first-neutron-deal/?noamp=mobile#respond Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:43:08 +0000 https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/12/rocket-lab-stock-pops-25-after-company-reports-strong-revenue-growth-first-neutron-deal/

A view of Rocket Lab’s HASTE suborbital launch vehicle.

Rocket Lab

Rocket Lab shares jumped in post-market trading after the company reported third-quarter results and announced its first customer for its coming Neutron vehicle.

The space infrastructure company reported third-quarter revenue increased to $104.8 million, up 55% from $67.6 million for the same period a year ago, and above Wall Street’s expectation of $102 million, according to analysts surveyed by LSEG.

Its net loss also increased year over year, to $51.9 million from $40.6 million, but its loss of 10 cents per share came in slightly below analyst expectations of a loss of 11 cents a share.

Rocket Lab forecast fourth-quarter revenue between $125 million and $135 million, which at the midpoint would see the company bring in about $430 million this year.

Additionally, the company announced its first launch deal for its Neutron rocket.

A “confidential commercial satellite constellation operator” signed for two missions in mid-2026, which Rocket Lab said were at a price “consistent with our target” for the vehicle. Previously, the company said it was targeting a price point of about $50 million per Neutron launch.

Shares of Rocket Lab jumped as much as 25% in after-hours trading, up from its close at $14.66 a share. The stock has been flying up the past three months, nearly tripling over that period.

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The bulk of Rocket Lab’s Q3 revenue growth came from its Space Systems unit, which builds spacecraft and sells satellite parts. The business brought in $83.9 million of the quarter’s revenue, up from $46.3 million a year ago, while its Launch unit brought in $21 million, roughly in line wit- $21.3 million a year prior.

But the company’s small Electron vehicle, which sells for about $8.5 million per mission, has become the world’s third-most-frequently launched orbital rocket. It’s launched a company record 12 missions so far this year. And Rocket Lab added $55 million worth of new launch contracts to Electron’s backlog in Q3.

Development of Neutron — as well as the Archimedes engines that power it — remains a key watch item for investors, with heavy research and development spending driving most of Rocket Lab’s quarterly losses.

Neutron is seen as crucial for Rocket Lab to tap larger markets, including a broader swath of U.S. national security launches. The company continues to expect Neutron to debut in mid-2025 and has outlined a variety of milestones in the rocket’s path to launch — including assembly and testing of flight hardware, firing “multiple” Archimedes engines and continuing on work underway on the launchpad infrastructure in Virginia.

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Apple commits $1.5 billion to Globalstar for expanded iPhone satellite services https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/01/apple-commits-1-5-billion-to-globalstar-for-expanded-iphone-satellite-services/ https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/01/apple-commits-1-5-billion-to-globalstar-for-expanded-iphone-satellite-services/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 01 Nov 2024 20:19:09 +0000 https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/01/apple-commits-1-5-billion-to-globalstar-for-expanded-iphone-satellite-services/

Apple committed about $1.5 billion to satellite communications company Globalstar to fund the expansion of iPhone services, the companies disclosed in a securities filing on Friday.

The tech giant’s deal with Globalstar includes $1.1 billion in cash, of which $232 million will go toward the satellite company’s current debt, and a 20% equity stake. The deal is expected to close on Tuesday.

Apple has already been spending hundreds of millions for Globlastar services, which enabled the 2022 rollout of iPhone emergency satellite texting.

It is one of several efforts in the direct-to-device, or D2D, satellite connectivity market — which provides service to unmodified devices such as smartphones directly from space — with other projects underway from SpaceX, AST SpaceMobile, Iridium, Lynk and EchoStar.

Globalstar stock jumped 31.4% in Friday trading to close at $1.38 a share.

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In the filing, Globalstar noted that it will continue to allocate about 85% of its network capacity to Apple.

The new funds will allow Globalstar to purchase new satellites and expand its ground infrastructure. Globalstar currently operates 31 satellites and has already ordered as many as 26 satellites to replenish and upgrade its constellation in low Earth orbit.

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Losing GPS could cost billions, so the Space Force is having companies like Astranis build a backup network https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/01/losing-gps-could-cost-billions-so-the-space-force-is-having-companies-like-astranis-build-a-backup-network/ https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/01/losing-gps-could-cost-billions-so-the-space-force-is-having-companies-like-astranis-build-a-backup-network/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 01 Nov 2024 18:00:01 +0000 https://thenewshub.in/2024/11/01/losing-gps-could-cost-billions-so-the-space-force-is-having-companies-like-astranis-build-a-backup-network/

A depiction of Nexus satellites in a medium Earth orbit constellation.

Astranis

The U.S. Air Force began deploying the Global Positioning System — more commonly known as GPS — nearly 50 years ago, satellites which have become critical infrastructure for both the military and the economy.

Since then, GPS is estimated to have generated more than $1.4 trillion in economic benefits, according to a Commerce Department study. But the agency warned that an “outage could potentially have an economic impact of $1 billion a day.” 

Pentagon leaders believe those losses are a conservative estimate, leading the U.S. Space Force to kick off a roughly $2 billion satellite program known as the Resilient Global Positioning System. Called R-GPS for short, the program is intended to provide an alternative, backup network for the current satellite system.

“[GPS is] vitally important to everything we do day-to-day, from the stock market, for timing of every transaction, to the crops we field,” Lt. Col. Justin Deifel, leader of R-GPS at the Space Force’s Space Systems Command, told CNBC.

“It’s like water and electricity. … It’s a utility of the economy and a utility of a warfighter that we need to make sure is available,” Deifel added.

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The importance of the existing 31 GPS satellites in orbit, as well as the potential threat in space from U.S. adversaries like Russia and China, has led the Pentagon to prioritize building the alternative R-GPS network — and the Space Force has turned to the commercial space industry to do so.

Last month, the branch awarded four companies with contracts for R-GPS design concepts: Astranis, Axient, L3 Harris and Sierra Space.

first satellite malfunctioned last year due to a third-party issue with its solar arrays, the company’s experience operating in the distant geosynchronous orbit has Gedmark confident about its chances in the R-GPS program.

“We are the only company that has proven on orbit a spacecraft of this class — a low cost, [radiation]-hardened satellite for high orbits,” Gedmark said.

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SpaceX’s Starship rocket completes fifth test flight, lands booster in dramatic catch https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/13/spacexs-starship-rocket-completes-fifth-test-flight-lands-booster-in-dramatic-catch/ https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/13/spacexs-starship-rocket-completes-fifth-test-flight-lands-booster-in-dramatic-catch/?noamp=mobile#respond Sun, 13 Oct 2024 14:18:49 +0000 https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/13/spacexs-starship-rocket-completes-fifth-test-flight-lands-booster-in-dramatic-catch/

The Super Heavy booster lands on the company’s launch tower during the fifth Starship flight on Oct. 13, 2024.

SpaceX

SpaceX launched its fifth test flight of its Starship rocket on Sunday and made a dramatic first catch of the rocket’s more than 20-story tall booster.

The achievement marks a major milestone toward SpaceX’s goal of making Starship a fully reusable rocket system.

Elon Musk‘s company launched Starship at 8:25 a.m. ET from its Starbase facility near Brownsville, Texas. The rocket’s “Super Heavy” booster returned to land on the arms of the company’s launch tower nearly seven minutes after launch.

“Are you kidding me?” SpaceX communications manager Dan Huot said on the company’s webcast.

“What we just saw, that looked like magic,” Huot added.

SpaceX catches the first-stage “Super Heavy” booster of its Starship rocket on Oct. 13, 2024.

Sergio Flores | Afp | Getty Images

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson congratulated SpaceX in a post on social media.

“As we prepare to go back to the Moon under Artemis, continued testing will prepare us for the bold missions that lie ahead,” Nelson wrote.

Starship separated and continued on to space, traveling halfway around the Earth before reentering the atmosphere and splashing down in the Indian Ocean as intended to complete the test.

There were no people on board the fifth Starship flight. The company’s leadership has said SpaceX expects to fly hundreds of Starship missions before the rocket launches with any crew.

Read more CNBC space news

The full Starship system has flown four spaceflight tests previously, with launches in April and November of last year, as well as this March and June. Each of the test flights have achieved more milestones than the last.

SpaceX emphasizes that it tries to build “on what we’ve learned from previous flights” in its approach to developing the massive rocket.

SpaceX’s Starship lifts off from Starbase near Boca Chica, Texas, on October 13, 2024 during the rocket’s fifth flight test.

Sergio Flores | Afp | Getty Images

The Starship system is designed to be fully reusable and aims to become a new method of flying cargo and people beyond Earth. The rocket is also critical to NASA’s plan to return astronauts to the moon. SpaceX won a multibillion-dollar contract from the agency to use Starship as a crewed lunar lander as part of NASA’s Artemis moon program.

The Federal Aviation Administration issued SpaceX with a license to launch Starship’s fifth flight on Saturday, sooner than the regulator previously estimated. But the company wanted to launch the fifth flight earlier than October, leading both SpaceX and Musk to be vocally critical of the FAA, saying that “superfluous environmental analysis” was holding up the process.

While the FAA and partner agencies at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Commerce Department’s National Marine Fisheries Service conducted assessments more quickly than anticipated, SpaceX has also had to pay fines to environmental regulators regarding unauthorized water discharges at its Texas launch site.

launched for the first time in 2022.

Starship itself, at 165 feet tall, has six Raptor engines — three for use while in the Earth’s atmosphere and three for operating in the vacuum of space.

The rocket is powered by liquid oxygen and liquid methane. The full system requires more than 10 million pounds of propellant for launch.

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Bridgit Mendler's space startup Northwood passes first test, connecting prototype antenna to Planet satellites https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/09/bridgit-mendlers-space-startup-northwood-passes-first-test-connecting-prototype-antenna-to-planet-satellites/ https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/09/bridgit-mendlers-space-startup-northwood-passes-first-test-connecting-prototype-antenna-to-planet-satellites/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 09 Oct 2024 15:22:35 +0000 https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/09/bridgit-mendlers-space-startup-northwood-passes-first-test-connecting-prototype-antenna-to-planet-satellites/

The startup’s co-founders, from left: Chief Technology Officer Griffin Cleverly, CEO Bridgit Mendler and Head of Software Shaurya Luthra.

Northwood Space

Northwood Space, the startup led by former television star and singer Bridgit Mendler, passed its first major development test last week by connecting with Planet Labs imagery satellites in orbit.

“We’re building this global network to send data for satellites, built off of phased array technology that we have now successfully validated, both in the lab and in the field,” Mendler, Northwood’s CEO, told CNBC.

El Segundo, California-based Northwood, unveiled earlier this year, is focused on the ground side of the space connectivity equation. Ground stations are the vital link for transmitting data to and from orbit and are especially crucial for operating and controlling satellites.

The company’s prototype antenna “Frankie” during testing in North Dakota on Oct. 5, 2024.

Northwood Space

The startup is developing ground stations to be mass-produced and betting that its phased array-based system, called Portal, can outperform the parabolic dish antennas traditionally used by ground station companies. It’s projecting Portal will be able to connect to as many as 10 satellites at once versus the typical one to three for parabolic dish antennas.

“For Northwood, what we’re wanting to do is introduce a new standard for connectivity for companies,” Mendler said.

Read more CNBC space news

The ground station as a service, or GSaaS, market has companies going after the opportunity in managing the Earth-based side of space infrastructure. Along those lines, Amazon has launched its AWS Ground Station service, and satellite communications giant Eutelsat has proposed a nearly $1 billion deal in the sector.

Mendler’s Northwood wants to take GSaaS a step further, eliminating what she sees as “connectivity very much stuck in a different era” of blackouts and “super expensive networks.”

“Analogizing to the cellular industry — where we draw parallels to how cell towers and shared assets like that ultimately have super vertically integrated players — wound up offloading and selling their assets to the tower companies. We expected that the shared model is going to be an efficiency,” Mendler said.

In her view, ground stations are “the third leg of the stool” of space technology, with the other two being rockets, or the cargo vehicles, and satellites, or the orbital infrastructure.

“The industry is really at a point where there’s a lot of appetite for growth, and this is something that we can really interject into the industry and accelerate progress,” Mendler said.

North Dakota testing

Setting up the company’s prototype antenna in the early hours of Oct. 2, 2024.

Northwood Space

Last week the Northwood team was out in remote Maddock, North Dakota, to test its prototype antenna — “fondly dubbed Frankie,” Mendler noted — by connecting to a Planet satellite in orbit. 

The effort is known as a TT&C — telemetry, tracking and control — test, with Northwood aiming to make contact with Planet’s satellite in both S-band and X-band frequencies. 

“We were able to achieve bi-directional communications for the full duration of a pass with Planet’s satellites and achieved nominal communications for them. They were able to perform their operations as they would on their own system,” Mendler said.

Testing the prototype on Oct. 5, 2024.

Northwood Space

Northwood designed and built Frankie in four months, the company said, and was able to deploy the antenna “from off the truck to live sky testing” in six hours. Planet, with more than 150 imagery satellites in orbit, heralded Northwood’s test as a “major milestone.”

“Northwood is not only solving for historical issues like cost and scale, but has built and successfully field-tested their phased array antenna faster than previously thought possible. We’re proud to be a part of this breakthrough in ground station technology,” Joseph Breu, Planet’s senior director of global ground networks, said in a statement to CNBC.

A rendering of a Portal site.

Northwood Space

Northwood has designed two antennas for its Portal system, with a larger 5-by-5-feet S-band frequency antenna and a smaller 18-by-18-inch X-band antenna.

The company plans to deploy Portal sites that can support as many as 10 simultaneous satellite connections, with data rates over 1 gigabit per second per beam, beginning next year. Northwood is currently assessing locations in the U.S., Europe, Australia and New Zealand for its first Portal sites.

“Performance-wise, we achieved everything we were hoping to achieve,” Mendler said, adding that Northwood is “really grateful for [Planet’s] participation and support throughout the test.”

“It just unlocks a lot of things about the next chapter,” Mendler said.

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A new Blue Origin: CEO Dave Limp is bringing urgency and ‘decisiveness’ to Jeff Bezos’ space company https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/05/a-new-blue-origin-ceo-dave-limp-is-bringing-urgency-and-decisiveness-to-jeff-bezos-space-company/ https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/05/a-new-blue-origin-ceo-dave-limp-is-bringing-urgency-and-decisiveness-to-jeff-bezos-space-company/?noamp=mobile#respond Sat, 05 Oct 2024 12:00:01 +0000 https://thenewshub.in/2024/10/05/a-new-blue-origin-ceo-dave-limp-is-bringing-urgency-and-decisiveness-to-jeff-bezos-space-company/

Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp, left, and founder Jeff Bezos look up at a New Glenn rocket on at the company’s LC-36 facility in Florida.

Blue Origin

Dave Limp had only one question for Jeff Bezos when he interviewed last year to become CEO of Blue Origin, the billionaire’s space venture.

“Jeff, is Blue Origin a hobby or a business?” Limp asked.

After 14 years as a senior Amazon executive, Limp told CNBC he made it clear to Bezos that he wasn’t interested in leading Blue Origin if the nearly 25-year-old venture wasn’t intended to be a serious company.

“I don’t know how to run a hobby,” Limp said, adding that “if it was a hobby, it’s not right for me.”

But he said Bezos was adamant that Blue Origin needed to be a business.

Read more CNBC space news

Limp admitted that it took some convincing from Bezos for him to make the move over to the space sector. “My initial reaction was: It’s not the right role for me because I’m not an aerospace engineer,” he said. But he decided to take the leap of faith.

“Jeff felt that [Blue Origin] needed manufacturing expertise; it needed decisiveness; it need a little bit of energy,” Limp said.

Limp has now been the CEO of Blue Origin for nine months and counting. He took the reins from prior leadership who had widely expanded the company’s workforce and infrastructure but had fallen years behind on several major programs and lost competitions for key government contracts.

CEO Dave Limp, third from the left, with Blue Origin employees at the company’s New Glenn facility in Florida.

Blue Origin

Blue Origin for years has been flying tourists and research to the edge of space on short jaunts, including Bezos himself. And over the past two decades, Bezos has been spending billions of dollars a year to turn Blue Origin into a space sector powerhouse. The company’s projects reach from rockets and spacecraft to space stations and lunar landers.

Yet in the industry table stakes of orbital missions, Blue Origin has not entered the serious rocketry game, as the U.S. launch market remains dominated by SpaceX, followed by United Launch Alliance, Rocket Lab and Firefly Aerospace.

But the company said it’s closer than ever to the long-awaited debut of its New Glenn rocket. Towering about 320 feet tall, the launch vehicle is advertised as lifting as much as 45,000 kilograms (or over 99,000 pounds) to low Earth orbit — double that of SpaceX’s workhorse Falcon 9 rocket.

A New Glenn rocket stands at LC-36 for the firs time for tanking and mechanical system testing on Feb. 21, 2024.

Blue Origin

Like Falcon 9, New Glenn is designed to be partly reusable. Blue Origin aims to return and land the rocket’s booster, its largest and most valuable section, to unlock the kind of cost and time efficiencies that SpaceX claims with its rockets.

New Glenn’s first launch attempt is slated for November. Blue Origin is in the final stages of putting it all together, including conducting a recent crucial test firing of the rocket’s upper stage last month.

Originally the company was aiming for the audacious feat of flying NASA’s ESCAPADE mission to Mars on New Glenn’s debut. But with a dwindling launch window, the agency delayed ESCAPADE to a later launch. In the mission’s place, Blue Origin will fly a demonstration of its spacecraft Blue Ring on the first New Glenn launch.

ULA’s Vulcan rocket. The latter requires two engines per launch.

With ULA aiming for four Vulcan launches this year — with two down and two to go — Blue has delivered eight flight-ready BE-4 engines to ULA, as well as seven BE-4 engines for its first New Glenn launch. On the first two Vulcan launches, the BE-4 engines performed as expected.

“We’d like to [be delivering] about an engine a week by the end of the year. I’m not sure we’ll get exactly to a week, but it’ll be sub-10 days … [and] by the end of 2025, we have to be faster than that,” Limp said.

A United Launch Alliance Vulcan Centaur rocket launches from pad 41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station at 7:25 a.m. on October 4, 2024 in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Paul Hennessy | Anadolu | Getty Images

Limp has “a very high level of confidence” that New Glenn will launch before the end of the year. And Blue plans to scale the cadence of New Glenn missions quickly, wanting to perform as many as 10 New Glenn launches next year. Yet it still has a ways to go to rival SpaceX, which is targeting nearly 150 Falcon rocket launches this year.

Perhaps even more optimistically, Blue aims to land New Glenn on its very first launch, cheekily naming the booster “So You’re Telling Me There’s a Chance.” No company has stuck the landing on the first try with an orbital rocket booster, and New Glenn will be aiming for a 200-foot-wide pad on a vessel named Jacklyn in the Atlantic Ocean.

“It’ll be adventurous. It’ll be fun. I’m excited about it … but if we [don’t] stick the landing the first time, that’s OK. We’ve got another booster right behind it. We’ll build more,” Limp said.

The first flight New Glenn rocket booster.

Blue Origin

It seems almost inevitable that New Glenn’s future will involve a crew spacecraft — especially given Blue’s long-standing mission: “We envision millions of people living and working in space for the benefit of Earth.” Currently, only SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft is certified by NASA to fly astronauts to-and-from orbit after Boeing’s Starliner suffered another setback this summer. 

But Limp deferred when asked about development of a New Glenn crew capsule: “Nothing to say about that.”

Blue Origin has gained experience in the lower-risk, suborbital realm of human spaceflight with its New Shepard rocket and capsule. Limp noted that Blue Origin is working to get “New Shepard back to a cadence of regular flights,” flying both crews and research cargo.

It’s done two New Shepard missions this year, and is aiming for a third next week. That mission will also feature a new rocket booster and capsule to add a second vehicle “to better meet growing customer demand,” the company said, having lost a booster during a cargo flight failure in September 2022.

Beyond New Glenn and engine production, Blue’s making more progress: Last year it won a $3.4 billion NASA contract to build a lunar lander for the agency’s astronauts. In the spring, Blue got entry into the Pentagon’s lucrative National Security Space Launch program, a turnaround from having missed out on the previous phase of NSSL in 2020.

As for Limp, he’s spending his time on “a little bit of a round trip between” Blue Origin’s facilities every 2½ weeks. He goes from its Seattle headquarters, to meeting with customers in Washington, D.C., to seeing engine production and testing in Huntsville, Alabama, and finally checking out New Glenn work at Cape Canaveral, Texas. It’s all part of his interest in leading a proper space company, rather than a billionaire’s hobby.

“Let’s have the financial discipline to build a business that we love, and let’s make decisions quickly, knowing that we’ll make some mistakes. But let’s not make the same mistakes, and let’s cure them quick,” Limp said.

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The four astronauts NASA picked for the first crewed moon mission in 50 years https://thenewshub.in/2023/04/04/the-four-astronauts-nasa-picked-for-the-first-crewed-moon-mission-in-50-years/ https://thenewshub.in/2023/04/04/the-four-astronauts-nasa-picked-for-the-first-crewed-moon-mission-in-50-years/?noamp=mobile#respond Tue, 04 Apr 2023 11:44:30 +0000 https://thenewshub.in/2023/04/04/the-four-astronauts-nasa-picked-for-the-first-crewed-moon-mission-in-50-years/

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Astronauts who will helm the first crewed moon mission in five decades were revealed on Monday, queuing up the quartet to begin training for the historic Artemis II lunar flyby that is set to take off in November 2024.

The astronauts are NASA’s Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency.

Wiseman is a 47-year-old decorated naval aviator and test pilot who was first selected to be a NASA astronaut in 2009. A native of Baltimore, Maryland, he’s completed one prior spaceflight, a 165-day trip to the International Space Station that had launched aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket in 2014. Most recently, Wiseman served as chief of the astronaut office before stepping down in November 2022, making him eligible for a flight assignment.

Wiseman will serve as commander of the Artemis II mission.

Hansen, 47, is a fighter pilot who was selected by the Canadian Space Agency for astronaut training in 2009. From London, Ontario, Hansen is one of only four active Canadian astronauts, and he recently became the first Canadian to be put in charge of training for a new class of NASA astronauts.

He will be the first Canadian ever to travel to deep space.

Glover is a 46-year-old naval aviator who returned to Earth from his first spaceflight in 2021 after piloting the second crewed flight of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft and spending nearly six months aboard the International Space Station.

“It’s so much more than the four names that have been announced,” Glover said during the Monday announcement at NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston. “We need to celebrate this moment in human history. … It is the next step in the journey that will get humanity to Mars.”

Glover, born in Pomona, California, served in several military squadrons in the United States and Japan in the 2000s, and he completed test pilot training with the US Air Force. When he was selected for the NASA astronaut corps in 2013, he was working in the US Senate as a legislative fellow. All told, Glover logged 3,000 flight hours in more than 40 aircraft, over 400 carrier arrested landings and 24 combat missions.

Glover’s first mission to space was as part of the SpaceX Crew-1 team, which launched to the International Space Station in November 2020 for a six-month stay on the orbiting laboratory.

Koch, 44, is a veteran of six spacewalks — including the first all-female spacewalk in 2019. She holds the record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman, with a total of 328 days in space. Koch is also an an electrical engineer who helped develop scientific instruments for multiple NASA mission. Koch, a native of Grand Rapids, Michigan, also spent a year at the South Pole, an arduous stay that could well prepare her for the intensity of a moon mission.

The Artemis II mission will build on Artemis I, an uncrewed test mission that sent NASA’s Orion capsule on a 1.4 million-mile voyage to lap the moon that concluded in December. The space agency deemed that mission a success and is still working to review all the data collected.

If all goes to plan, Artemis II will take off around November 2024. The crew members, strapped inside the Orion spacecraft, will launch atop a NASA-developed Space Launch System rocket from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

The journey is expected to last about 10 days and will send the crew out beyond the moon, potentially further than any human has traveled in history, though the exact distance is yet to be determined.

The “exact distance beyond the Moon will depend on the day of liftoff and the relative distance of the Moon from the Earth at the time of the mission,” NASA spokesperson Kathryn Hambleton said via email.

After circling the moon, the spacecraft will return to Earth for a splashdown landing in the Pacific Ocean.

Artemis II is expected to pave the way for the Artemis III mission later this decade, which NASA has vowed will put the first woman and person of color on the lunar surface. It will also mark the first time humans have touched down on the moon since the Apollo program ended in 1972.

The Artemis III mission is expected to take off later this decade. But much of the technology the mission will require, including spacesuits for walking on the moon and a lunar lander to ferry the astronauts to the moon’s surface, is still in development.

NASA is targeting a 2025 launch date for Artemis III, though the space agency’s inspector general has already said delays will likely push the mission to 2026 or later.

The space agency has been seeking to return people to the moon for more than a decade. The Artemis program was designed to pave the way to establishing a permanent lunar outpost, allowing astronauts to live and work deeper into space long term as NASA and its partners map a path to sending the first humans to Mars.

Vanessa Wyche, the director of NASA’s Johnson Space Center, declined to provide details to CNN about the selection process. But she emphasized the diversity of the Artemis II crew, which includes men and women rather than only a staff of White male test pilots as has been the case for historic missions of the past.

“I can tell you, they still all have the right stuff,” Wyche said. “We have requirements different than we did (when we) just had test pilots” on inaugural missions.

Koch said in an interview with CNN’s Ed Lavandera that the group found out they were selected a few weeks ago.

“We were all sent to a meeting that was on our calendars under a different pretext that didn’t sound as lofty as the one it was going to be,” Koch said. “And accidentally two of us were very late to that meeting.”

She said the offer rendered her “speechless.”

“It truly is an honor,” she added. “It’s an honor — not to get myself in the space — but because it’s amazing to be a part of this team that’s going back to the moon and on to Mars.”

An interview with the four astronauts will air on “CNN This Morning” on Tuesday, which starts at 6 am ET.

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