ISS Shelter Alert, Starshield Launch & Roman Telescope 8 Months Early
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(00:01:22) SpaceX Starshield Launch Saturday
(00:02:20) Roman Telescope Eight Months Early
(00:03:00) Mars Clay Deposits Ancient Ocean
(00:03:37) Hidden Black Holes Via Starlight Flashes
This episode opens with one of the most dramatic moments aboard the International Space Station in recent memory. On June 6th, five NASA astronauts were ordered into a Crew Dragon safe-haven capsule while Russian cosmonauts attempted repairs on the cracking PrK section of the Zvezda service module. The alert lasted two hours before standing down — but the underlying leak remains unresolved, and the differing risk assessments between NASA and Roscosmos raise questions about long-term station management.
Next, SpaceX is launching 21 Starlink satellites alongside two classified Starshield satellites from Vandenberg — a growing pattern of military payloads embedded in commercial Falcon 9 missions. The booster targeting its 10th flight and the 201st drone-ship landing underscores how routine, and strategically significant, this cadence has become.
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope has moved its launch date to August 30th, 2026 — eight months ahead of schedule — with final integration underway at Goddard. Meanwhile on Mars, clay deposits near Oxia Planum now extend 600 kilometres toward Mawrth Vallis, pointing to a massive ancient water event roughly four billion years ago and sharpening the case for the ExoMars landing site.
Finally, a new study in Physical Review Letters proposes detecting supermassive black hole binaries through repeating gravitational lensing flashes — a method that could let optical observatories like Roman and Vera Rubin beat gravitational wave detectors to the discovery.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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