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The Space Roundup - Apr 3rd, 2022

Hello, hello, my dear space lovers!

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Are you ready for yet another week of space awesomeness? 3, 2, 1, zero! Lift-off!

SpaceX updates

This week SpaceX successfully launched its fourth rideshare mission carrying around 40 satellites from multiple organizations and several countries. These missions are amazing as they are very cheap and allow for a variety of budgets to get to orbit. 

Their new Starship Booster 7 is now at the launch site for testing, ahead of the first orbital flight. Will this be the one to make it? Or will it be discarded as the previous one? The first Raptor 2, the latest version of the new SpaceX engine, has arrived at Starbase. Tons more of those are expected to be arriving soon! 

New record! 

This week our beloved Hubble Space Telescope has crushed a new record: it detected the most distant star ever seen. The light of this star has taken 12.9 billion years to reach Earth. How amazing is that?  

A record broken: Hubble finds the most distant star ever seen

Rocket Lab

Rocket Lab successfully launched two satellites this week. It is the 25th time they fly its Electron rocket so far!

We need a lift!

The Rosalind Franklin martian rover is now technically ready to go to Mars…but it needs a lift there! After what happened with Russia, the ESA is looking for alternative ways of transporting the rover to the red planet… not an easy task. Let’s hope this is not the end of the mission. Go, ESA!

ExoMars: el robot gemelo de rover Rosalind Franklin aprobó su primera  prueba | BAE Negocios

Blue Origin

Blue Origin flew its New Shepard rocket once again this week. It was the fourth crewed mission and everything went according to plan. It flew a crew of six people, five of which were paying customers. Amazing experience that has to be!  After flying 14 people in 2021, they plan to at least triple that number this year. Nice!

Updates from China

The construction of the Chinese space station in orbit is going well according to CMSA. The crew is working around the clock to make sure everything goes smoothly while they prepare to return home soon.  

The next two astronaut crews that are going to follow up with the work are training heavily before their trips to orbit.

This week,

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