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SpaceX launches television satellite & Jupiter changes direction tonight - Space News (Mar 10, 2026)

SpaceX launches television satellite & Jupiter changes direction tonight - Space News (Mar 10, 2026)

The Automated Daily

March 10, 20264m 7s

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Today's topics: SpaceX launches television satellite - SpaceX successfully deployed the EchoStar-25 satellite to geostationary orbit on March 9th, marking the company's first geosynchronous transfer orbit launch of 2026 and supporting Dish Network's direct broadcast capabilities. Jupiter changes direction tonight - Jupiter ends its retrograde motion on March 10, 2026, reversing its westward path through Gemini and resuming normal eastward motion visible to evening sky observers. Starship V3 passes major test - SpaceX's Starship V3 first flight vehicle completed critical cryogenic testing with no issues, bringing the next-generation orbital rocket closer to its anticipated April 2026 debut. NASA restructures Artemis architecture - NASA officially selected ULA's Centaur 5 upper stage for the Space Launch System, standardizing the Artemis program architecture and accelerating lunar mission cadence.



Episode Transcript

SpaceX launches television satellite
Starting with the launch news: SpaceX had a successful Monday night, sending the EchoStar-25 satellite to geostationary orbit aboard a Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral. The satellite deployed nearly 33 minutes after liftoff, exactly where it needed to be. This mission is important because it marks SpaceX's first geosynchronous transfer orbit launch of 2026, and it's going to power Dish Network's direct broadcast television service. The booster came back to Earth safely on the droneship in the Atlantic, marking the 583rd successful landing for SpaceX overall. What's particularly interesting here is the context: EchoStar has been shifting its strategy in a big way. Last year, they sold off spectrum licenses to SpaceX for 17 billion dollars—split between cash and stock—because they decided SpaceX and Starlink were better positioned to deliver mobile connectivity from space. So while Dish gets this TV satellite, SpaceX is clearly the company moving faster in the orbital race.

Jupiter changes direction tonight
Switching gears to something you can actually see tonight: Jupiter is changing direction in the evening sky. For months now, it's been moving backward through the constellation Gemini—something called retrograde motion. But on March 10th, that stops. Jupiter will pause and then resume its normal eastward motion. Now, this isn't actually Jupiter moving backward through space—it's an optical illusion from Earth's perspective. As we orbit faster than the outer planets, we temporarily overtake them, making them appear to reverse course. It's a neat reminder of how much we learn just by watching the sky change night to night.

Starship V3 passes major test
In development news, SpaceX has hit a major milestone with Starship. The next-generation V3 vehicle's first flight test article, Ship 39, just completed full cryogenic testing at their test site. This means engineers filled it with super-cold liquid methane and oxygen, ran structural squeeze tests to simulate the forces of a future tower catch, and checked all the redesigned propellant systems. No leaks, no problems. And this matters because Elon Musk has indicated Flight 12—the first full V3 flight—could happen around early to mid-April. That's soon. The V3 design brings larger fuel tanks, more payload capacity, and better reusability. So the pace is accelerating on Starship development.

NASA restructures Artemis architecture
Finally, NASA is making big moves on the Artemis program. The agency officially selected United Launch Alliance's Centaur 5 upper stage to fly on the Space Launch System starting with Artemis 4, currently targeted for early 2028. This is part of a broader restructuring of the program that emphasizes standardization and reducing complexity. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced last week that the agency is accelerating its lunar mission cadence—planning to fly astronauts to the Moon regularly, with one landing every year after the initial few test flights. By consolidating on proven hardware like the Centaur, instead of developing new upper stages, NASA is betting it can move faster and more reliably. It's a pragmatic shift that trades some future capability for near-term mission assurance.



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