April 6-12, 2026 / Hawai`i Island, USA

Vol 45, Week 14: Lunar Broadcast Precursor — Terrestrial Edition

14 in Space! And Could the ISS Become the Artemis Moon Gateway?

Artemis II four Astronauts are spending 9+ days on a trip around the Moon, while the International Space Station has been continuously occupied by other Astronauts for 9,000+ days. Taikonauts have been uninterruptedly on the Tiangong Space Station for 1,800+ days. For the first time in 53 years, humans are traveling to the distance of the Moon, coming back to Earth on a free-return trajectory to a Pacific Ocean splashdown on April 10, even if the Orion propulsion system doesn’t perform as planned. Although Artemis II went directly toward the Moon after launching from Earth and completing a short orbital period, Madhu Thangavelu reports results from University of Southern California’s Astronautical Engineering Studio that speculate on using the ISS to get to the Moon. Thangavelu says the ISS initial concept was to serve as a human-tended platform to integrate large vehicles for missions to the Moon and deep space. He notes the ISS orbit makes for advantageous lunar departure 3+ times per month with fully fueled upper stages, circumventing the need for orbital fueling, and that US$50M for each of 48 tourist visits yearly to the ISS in Orion or Crew Dragon, some going on to the Moon and back, would provide US$2-4B in revenue. (Image Credits: CNSA, NASA, NASA-John Kraus, ESA)

SpaceX Preps IPO, Consistent Starship Flights for AI and Crew, Lunar Lander Safety Upgrades

As SpaceX is preparing for its Initial Public Offering of stock, President and Chief Operating Officer Gwynne Shotwell discussed Starship. As well as humans, Starship will carry satellites for an AI system. Shotwell believes flights for the system will be similar to launches for Starlinks that rode aboard Falcon 9s on ~74% of the 165 uses of the rocket in 2025. She states, “The more consistent the operation, the safer,” which is vital for human travel. A NASA OIG report last month called-out shortcomings in SpaceX’s Starship lunar lander, requesting: landing demonstrations that simulate full-scale crewed missions, more Starship manual control, stability of its tall body during touchdown, and elevator redundancy. NASA ASAP noted in its recent report, “the physics of landing a six-to-one height-to-width ratio vehicle on the uneven, poorly lit polar lunar surface seems questionable at best,” referring to 52m-tall Starship (14-story-building height). Starship Flight 12 atop new V3 Super Heavy Booster tripling payload capacity is now NET late this month from the new Pad 2 at Starbase. The test flight, featuring Booster 19 and Ship 39, will focus on testing the advanced Raptor 3 engines and refined thermal protection, continuing the flight profile of earlier missions with a planned, non-orbit-insertion, splashdown-focused trajectory. (Image Credits: SpaceX)

Humans in Space

☆ International Space Station, ~415-km LEO: This week Expedition 74 seven-members training for and planning to dock Cygnus XL supply mission, delivering the latest microgravity quantum physics research gear, stem-cell-therapy tests and food, water and other supplies; filling and flushing spacesuit water systems that regulate Astronaut body temperature on spacewalks; testing new ways to quickly download large amounts of data; conducting an emergency drill to practice cardiopulmonary resuscitation and other medical responses.

☆ Tiangong Space Station, ~390-km LEO: Shenzhou-21 three-member crew are cleaning and maintaining spacesuits after spacewalk that continued installation of space debris protection; are collecting samples for vestibular dynamics project involving the inner ear mechanism responsible for balance, spatial orientation, and coordinating eye movements with head motion; carried out a system-wide-pressure-emergency drill, coordinating with ground control; tested cabin air for cleanliness including level of volatile organic compounds. 

◐ Lunar Enterprise News: Scientists are looking forward to working with Artemis 2 crew for observations of the Moon with human eyes during closest lunar approach, for near-real-time, nuanced value which is complementary to sharper images available from orbiters. The Astronauts may see an eclipse of the Sun by the Moon. They will wear radiation, sleep and movement monitors. There is also an “organs on a chip” experiment using cells from the four astronauts to study effects of radiation and microgravity.

☄ Near-Earth Objects Close Approaches Mon Apr 6: Apollo Asteroid 2021 GN6 (0.014 AU); Tue Apr 7: Apollo Asteroid 2011 FT9 (0.008 AU); Tue Apr 7: Apollo Asteroid 2024 TB7 (0.012 AU); Sat Apr 11: Apollo Asteroid 2026 FE7 (0.022 AU

First Woman FLIES to the Moon …

NET (no earlier than)

Days

First Woman LANDS on the Moon …

Days

Loading Moon data for your location...

Loading planet data...


Land your name on the Moon!

Have your name sent to the Moon for FREE on the ILO-1 lunar mission via Astrolab FLEX rover (NET 2027). You will automatically be signed up for our weekly Space Calendar.

  • Sunday

    — Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex,
    Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex FL, USA
    NASA Astronaut and scientist, he flew on Space Shuttle Columbia for STS-83 and STS-94, flew on 5 Spacelab flights, led research on semiconductor material, and was founding...

    Monday

    — American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA),
    Online
    Don Edberg, Professor of Aerospace Engineering, Cal Poly Pomona; Adjunct Lecturer, Astronautical Engineering, University of Southern California (USC); Former Boeing Technical Fellow, convenes 12 classes every Monday...
    US$695 – US$1595
    — Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Nanjing University of Aeronautics & Astronautics,
    Tokyo, Japan
    A dynamic platform for professionals, engineers, academics, and industry leaders to share knowledge, present groundbreaking research, and explore the latest advancements in aerospace engineering. Chairperson is Koichi...

    Tuesday

    — China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC),
    Wenchang Space Launch Center, ~19°N, Hainan Island, China
    Launch window 21:30-21:47 China Time | 03:30-03:47 HST for 9th launch from Commercial LC-1, 59th launch from Wenchang. Long March 8 can take up to 5000 kg...
    — Northrop Grumman (NG),
    SLC-8 (~35°N), Vandenberg SFB CA, USA
    Launch window 07:30-12:30 PDT | 01:30-06:30 HST for an ESPA class satellite based on the Aegis Aerospace M-1 satellite bus used on the STPSat-4 mission for hosting...
    — Defense Strategies Institute,
    Washington DC, USA
    Positioning, Navigation, Timing -- foundational for space / lunar missions. Two days of networking, candid discussion, and collaboration for practical insights on the advancement and development of...
    Free
    — National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Association of Spaceflight Professionals (ASP),
    Online
    HRP IWS is the primary venue for reporting progress and results from HRP-funded research and technology tasks to Program Management, with the additional benefit of permitting cross-discipline...
    — International Academy of Astronautics (IAA),
    Madrid, Spain
    The foremost purpose of Space Situational Awareness (SSA) is to provide decision-making processes with a quantifiable and timely body of evidence (predictive/imminent/forensic) of behavior(s) attributable to specific...

    Wednesday

    — SpaceX,
    SLC-40 (~28°N), Cape Canaveral SFS FL, USA
    Set for 08:51 EDT (02:51 HST), 24th flight of Orbital ATK uncrewed supply craft and 23rd to ISS under Commercial Resupply Services contract with NASA; booster will...

    Thursday

    — American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA),
    Online
    Space weather is a new topic for many people, and it affects a wide variety of space systems. This course will demystify the topic and provide a...
    US$1595 – US$1795
    — Lunar Surface Innovation Consortium (LSIC), Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab (JHU-APL),
    Online
    Bri DeMattia (NASA Glenn Research Center) will present the work of NASA’s Safe, Innovative, Interoperable Modular Power for Lunar Exploration (SIIMPLE) team. At 11:00 EDT | 15:00...
    — American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) San Francisco Section,
    Mountain View CA, USA
    At Ludwig's Biergarten, 383 Castro St, Mountain View, CA 94041, Apr. 9, 2026, 5 - 6:30pm
    — China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC),
    Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center (TSLC), ~39°N, Shanxi, China
    Launch window 03:35-03:46 China Time April 9 | 09:35-09:46 HST April 8 for the 23rd launch from Launch Complex 9A, and 153rd launch from Taiyuan Satellite Launch...
    — SpaceX,
    SLC-4E (~35°N), Vandenberg SFB CA, USA
    Launch window 22:39 April 9 - 02:39 April 10 PDT | 16:39-20:39 April 9 HST for 25 internet satellites; Booster B1063 to land on ASDS OCISLY after...

    Friday

    — Hawai'i, USA,
    Statewide Hawai’i, USA
    Recognized proclamation to celebrate the first-ever imaged black hole M87* by Event Horizon Telescope collaboration involving Mauna Kea Observatories, given the Hawaiian name Pōwehi; imaged in April 2017 and...
    — Robinson Planetarium,
    Adrian MI, USA
    In honor of Astronomy Month, celebrated around the Earth, this full-dome planetarium program takes the audience out to the colorful birthplaces and burial grounds of stars, and...
    — Space Generation Advisory Council (SGAC),
    Colorado Springs CO, USA
    Held annually in conjunction with the Space Symposium, SGFF is a multi-day, high-intensity, fast-paced professional development and networking event focused on the global space industry. Students and...

    Saturday

    — The SpaceKind Foundation, Griffith Observatory,
    Los Angeles CA, USA
    No-cost, all-day, family-friendly event at Griffith Observatory featuring Astronauts Jannicke Mikkelsen and Ron Garan. A special ticketed feature presentation is at 7pm followed by a VIP reception...

    Sunday

    — Yuri's Night,
    Worldwide
    Launching parties around the world every year on or around April 12th, in commemoration of Yuri Gagarin becoming the first human to venture into space on April...
    — SpaceX,
    SLC-40 (~28°N), Cape Canaveral SFS FL, USA
    Launch window 02:57 - 06:57 EDT | 20:57 Apr 11 - 00:57 Apr 12 HST for 29 internet satellites; Booster 1080 expected to land on ASDS JRTI...
    — American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA),
    College Park MD, USA
    Research papers are presented in a formal technical meeting atmosphere, and ideas are exchanged and programs discussed. Cash prizes given for 1st, 2nd and 3rd place papers...