
Welcome to 7.37 missile report! It was interesting to monitor the speedy adoption of European officials to ensure that they could be released independently of other countries. A few years ago, European government satellites were released regularly on Russian Soyuz missiles, and recently on the Rockets Spacex Falcon 9 from the United States. Russia now Incompetent In European government departments, the Trump administration expands the rift across the Atlantic Ocean. European leaders were martyred in the Trump administration and its close association with Elon Musk, CEO of Spacex, as major reasons for supporting space access, which is currently the ability of ArianesPace only. If European countries are able to fix how they deal with commercial space companies, there is enough ambition, knowledge and money in Europe to enhance the competitive launch industry.
As always, we Reader’s presentations welcome. If you do not want to miss a problem, please subscribe to the box below (the model will not appear on the site’s possibility of the site). Each report will include information on small, medium and heavy missiles as well as a quick look at the next three launch operations in the calendar.
ISAR Aerospace AIMS to launch the weekend. A German startup named Isar Aerospace will try to launch the first on Saturday, with the aim of becoming the first in a wave of new European launch companies to reach orbit, according to ARS reports. The spectrum missile consists of two phases, a length of about 92 feet (28 meters), and it can move the loads of 1 ton of metric (2200 pounds) to the low -Earth orbit. Its headquarters in Munich, ISAR was founded by three university graduate students in 2018.
From the Arctic It is worth noting that this will be the first tropical attempt from a launch platform in Western Europe. The French Spiana Center in South America is the main space of European missiles. Virgin Orbit organized an attempt to launch an atmosphere from an airport in the United Kingdom in 2023, and it is located in European Russia. The ISAR launch site is called the Spaceport Anya, located about 650 miles (1050 km) north of Oslo, inside the Arctic circuit. (Introduction from Ellepeatea)