<img height="1" width="1" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=205228923362421&amp;ev=PageView &amp;noscript=1">
LAUNCH

Space is powering the next era of global connectivity.

JAXA contracts Rocket Lab for two Electron launches. Viasat selected for USSF SSC prime contract award. ESA extends Creotech’s CAMILA contract. And more.

Follow

Subscribe

Summary

Rocket Lab has signed a direct contract for two dedicated Electron launches with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). Viasat has been selected for a prime contract award by the US Space Force (USSF) Space Systems Command (USSF SSC) for the Protected Tactical SATCOM-Global (PTS-G) program. The European Space Agency (ESA) has awarded a contract extension to Creotech Instruments for the development and launch of a fourth satellite for Poland’s CAMILA Earth observation constellation, and more.

Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app.

Be sure to follow T-Minus on LinkedIn and Instagram.

T-Minus Guest

Elysia Segal brings us the Space Traffic Report from NASASpaceflight.com

Selected Reading

Rocket Lab Secures Multiple Launches with Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)

Viasat Awarded Contract by U.S. Space Force for Protected Tactical SATCOM-Global (PTS-G) Program

Poland Adds Fourth Satellite to CAMILA Earth Observation Constellation

Sateliot And Nordic Achieve A Historic Milestone By Connecting For The First Time A Cellular 5G IoT Device From Low-Earth Orbit Satellites

Faraday Factory and Zenno advance HTS magnets for space

Billionaire Isaacman Met With Trump Over Top NASA Job

A new rocket, sea launches and more: Chinese company CAS Space is thinking big

Surge in static fires as China's space sector gains momentum - NASASpaceFlight.com

Share your feedback.

What do you think about T-Minus Space Daily? Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts with us by completing our brief listener survey. Thank you for helping us continue to improve our show.  

Want to hear your company in the show?

You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here’s our media kit. Contact us at space@n2k.com to request more info.

Want to join us for an interview?

Please send your pitch to space-editor@n2k.com and include your name, affiliation, and topic proposal.

T-Minus is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc.

[MUSIC PLAYING] Today is October 10, 2025. I'm Maria Varmazis, and this is T-minus. [MUSIC PLAYING] T-minus. 20 seconds to LOS, T-dred. Open aboard. [INAUDIBLE] [MUSIC PLAYING] [INAUDIBLE] [INAUDIBLE] [MUSIC PLAYING] Five. Faraday Factory and Xenoastronautics are collaborating to improve superconductor magnets for space applications. Four. Ceteliot has successfully completed the first ever 5G IoT transmission between a standard commercial cellular IoT device directly from its low Earth orbit satellite constellation. Three. ESA has awarded a contract extension to Creotech Instruments for the development and launch of a fourth satellite for Poland's Camilla Earth Observation Constellation. Two. Viacet says it's been selected for a prime contract award by the US Space Force Space Systems Command for the Protected TacticalSatCom Global Program. Rocket Lab has signed a contract for two dedicated electron launches with JAXA. [MUSIC PLAYING] And it's Friday, so our partners at nasaspaceflight.com are back from their trips to the UK and will be wrapping up the launch news in today's Space Traffic Report. Stick around to find out what's gone up and what plans to head to space after today's Intel Briefing. [MUSIC PLAYING] Happy Friday, everybody. You made it. A quick programming note before I start our Intel Briefing. Monday here in the US is a federal holiday, so we will not be publishing our daily briefing on Monday, but we'll be back to business on Tuesday. OK, let's get into it now. First up, Rocket Lab has signed a direct contract for two dedicated electron launches with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, better known as JAXA. The two electron missions will deploy satellites for JAXA's innovative satellite technology demonstration program from Rocket Lab's Launch Complex 1 in New Zealand. The first launch is scheduled from December 2025 and will deploy the agency's rapid innovative payload demonstration satellite 4, also known as the RAISE 4 spacecraft, which is a single satellite that will demonstrate eight technologies developed by private companies, universities, and research institutes throughout Japan. The second launch is scheduled for 2026 and is a JAXA manifested rideshare of eight separate spacecraft that include educational smallsats, an ocean monitoring satellite, a demo satellite for ultra-small multi-spectral cameras, and a deployable antenna that can be packed tightly using origami folding techniques and unfurled to 25 times its size. Rocket Lab's CEO Peter Beck was quick to point out the international importance of these launches, supporting the growth of Japan's space industry with launches on a US rocket from a New Zealand launch site. And we certainly look forward to the no doubt incredibly clever mission names to come. Fiasat says it has been selected for a prime contract award by the US Space Force Space Systems Command for the Protected Tactical SATCOM Global Program, known as PTSG. Fiasat is one of five awardees to receive an initial delivery order one contract under what is a large, indefinite delivery indefinite quantity contract. The contract aims to deliver a proliferated small satellite geosynchronous Earth orbit constellation that will deliver resilience and anti-jam capabilities. Fiasat's Space and Missions Systems Team, within its Defense and Advanced Technology segment, will mature a design for a dual-band XK-A-band satellite and anchor station architecture, inclusive of tracking telemetry and command, satellite and network operations, and cybersecurity requirements. This work under the DO1 phase will take place over a seven month period, culminating in a technical design review and demonstration of this capability. And the first launch of this PTSG constellation is projected for 2028 to serve government and users. Let's head on over to Europe for the next two stories, starting first in Poland. The European Space Agency on behalf of Poland has awarded a contract extension to Creotech Instruments for the development and launch of a fourth satellite for the country's Camilla Earth Observation Constellation. Creotech Instruments signed a contract with the European Space Agency worth 52 million euros for the Camilla satellite constellation earlier this year. With the extension, the contract is now worth over 59 million euros. Camilla stands for Country Awareness Mission and Land Analysis, and it will be a constellation of at least four Earth Observation satellites. Under this contract, Creotech will provide the constellation ground infrastructure and launch services for the full scale missions. Spain's satellite has successfully completed the first ever 5G IoT transmission between a standard commercial cellular IoT device directly from its low Earth orbit satellite constellation. The company says that the demonstration validates full interoperability between terrestrial and satellite networks, and it proved that cellular IoT devices that are designed for existing mobile infrastructure can seamlessly connect to space-based networks without any hardware modifications. Satelliots sent an end-to-end message using Nordic Semiconductor's low-power cellular IoT module, which is the lowest power cellular IoT solution on the market, apparently, with industry-leading battery lifetime performance. Without any hardware changes, the module then successfully connected through Satelliots' Leo constellation, replicating the seamless roaming experience that mobile networks already offer on the ground. And Japan's Faraday Factory and New Zealand's Xenoastronautics are collaborating to improve superconductor magnets for space applications. Faraday Factory has been working to tailor superconductors specifically for space applications. They are a leading superconducting tape maker, and they plan to provide magnet coils with new types of HTS tape for testing in space. Xeno says that it hopes that the new tape will enable greater maneuverability of vehicles in space. So that is it for today's Intel Briefing. And speaking of vehicles in space, NSF will have the space traffic report for it shortly. But before we get to that, producer Alice Carruth joins me now for a look at all of the other stories that we're making, today's headlines. So what do you have for us today, Alice? Happy Friday, Maria. We have an interesting development in the bid to find NASA and administrator. What's old may be new again, as Bloomberg is reporting that Jared Isaacman met with US President Donald Trump about possibly taking on the role. China's CAS is awaiting clearance to launch a prototype cargo spacecraft, and NSF is reporting a surge in static fires over in China as their space industry continues to grow. And please remind all our listeners about where we can learn more about all of those stories. We include links to the original sources of all the stories we mentioned throughout the episode in the selected reading section of the show notes that are included on the podcast platform that you listen to us through. Those show notes can also be found on the episode page on our website, space.intuk.com. Tomorrow, please be sure to check your podcast feed for T-minus Deep Space. It's our special edition Saturday show, where we share an in-depth interview and dive a bit deeper into fascinating topics with brilliant guests. And on T-minus Deep Space tomorrow, we have Marta Goncalvesh, Science and Education Officer at the Portuguese Space Agency joining me. And we're going to be discussing the UROC Student Rocket Competition, which is actually happening right now. Yeah, that is on T-minus Deep Space tomorrow. Don't miss it. And a quick programming note that indeed Monday is a federal holiday here in the United States. It's Indigenous People's Day. And in honor of that day, we are running an encore presentation of my interview with former NASA astronaut and member of Chickasaw Nation, John B. Harrington. He was the first Indigenous astronaut to go to space. And he's going to be speaking about his work to engage Native American youth in STEM. And we'll be back to our regularly scheduled Intel briefings on Tuesday. [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] In Friday means, it's time to check in with our partners at nasaspaceflight.com for the weekly space traffic report. I'm Alicia Siegel for NSF. And this is your weekly space traffic report for T-minus space. Starting off the week on October 7, we had a Falcon 9 launch from Florida. Lifting off at 646 UTC on October 7, the mission carried 28 Starlink V2 mini satellites into orbit to expand SpaceX's internet constellation. The booster for this mission was B-1090, which flew for the eighth time and landed successfully on the deck of SpaceX's drone ship, a shortfall of Gravitas. The next day, a Starlink mission lifted off from California. On October 8, at 354 Universal Time, Falcon 9 ignited its engines to deliver 28 more Starlink V2 mini satellites into low Earth orbit. SpaceX used booster B-1071 for this mission, which flew for the 29th time, becoming the second booster to fly that many times. It ended this mission by successfully touching down on the deck of drone ship, Of Course I Still Love You. With the two missions this week, SpaceX has launched a total of 9,952 Starlink satellites, of which 1,344 have re-entered and 7,495 are now in their operational orbits. Later that day, Blue Origin launched its 15th human mission on New Shepard. Lifting off at 1340 UTC, the rocket carried six passengers to just over 100 kilometers and back. The passengers lifting off from Blue's launch site one in West Texas were Jeff Elgin, Dana Kara-Gasova, Will Lewis, Aaron Newman, Vitaly Ostrovsky, and Clint Kelly III, who had previously flown on New Shepard's NS-22 mission in August of 2022. They all got to enjoy a few minutes of microgravity and great views of the West Texas desert from above. Blue Origin used New Shepard Tail-4 as the booster for this mission, which flew for the 16th time. The capsule, RSS First Step, flew to space for its 15th time on this mission. Next week looks to be a busy one, with seven launches currently scheduled. Falcon 9 is slated to fly four missions. One of them will lift off from California to launch military communications satellites for the Space Force's Tranche 1 transport layer constellation. Another will launch a batch of internet satellites for Amazon's Kuiper network into orbit from Florida. And the final two Falcon 9s will each launch a Starlink mission from Florida as well. If the current schedule holds, the second mission will also set two records. Not only will the booster become the very first to fly 31 times, it'll also carry the 10,000th Starlink satellite. Over in New Zealand, an electron is set to take off from Rocket Lab's own launch complex to launch another synthetic aperture radar satellite for Japan's Sinspective. The mission is dubbed Owl New World. We'll also have a couple of missions from China. A Yin Li-1, also known as Gravity One, from Orion Space, is set to lift off from a launch platform stationed off the coast of China. Later in the week, we'll also have a Chongzhang 8a launch from the commercial side of Wenchang. But of course, the main event next week will be Starship's Flight 11. The booster for this mission is already sitting on the pad, and if all goes well, it might fly as soon as Monday, October 13th. As always, keep an eye on our next Spaceflight app and website for updates. It's a great resource for the latest info on launches, and it's completely free. I'm Alicia Segal for NSF, and that's your weekly Space Traffic Report. Now back to T-Minus Space. (upbeat music) We'll be right back. (air whooshing) Welcome back. In Brownsville, Texas, where crowds gather every few months to watch SpaceX launch from Boca Chica Beach, there is a new program called Project Vortex, giving high school students a chance to build and launch a rocket of their own. The Star Society, meaning the South Texas Astronomical Society, is putting this project together, and it is the first of its kind in the region. In over 13 weeks, local students will design, assemble, and launch an 11-foot rocket to reach about 10,000 feet next spring. And the teams will handle everything from avionics to outreach, because, as the organizers say, Spaceflight needs more than engineers alone. Amen to that. A rocketry initiative is always a plos worthy, and it's no coincidence that tomorrow we are running a special on a rocketry competition in Europe, but I'm highlighting this story today because this rocketry competition is specifically noteworthy because of where it takes place. The Rio Grande Valley of South Texas has long struggled with poverty and limited access to STEM opportunities, but with SpaceX's growing presence nearby, it looks like things might be changing. Project Vortex is giving local students the opportunity to see aerospace as something that they can actually reach for without having to leave home. So as exciting as those super heavy launches are from Starbase Texas, Project Vortex is taking that energy and turning it into real pathways for South Texas students to build, dream, and maybe one day even launch something of their own. (upbeat music) And that's T-minus brought to you by N2K Cyberwire. We'd love to know what you think of our podcast. Your feedback ensures we deliver the insights that keep you a step ahead in the rapidly changing space industry. If you like our show, please share a rating and review in your podcast app. And please also fill out the survey in the show notes or send us an email at space@n2k.com. We're proud that N2K Cyberwire is part of the daily routine of the most influential leaders and operators in the public and private sector, from the Fortune 500 to many of the world's preeminent intelligence and law enforcement agencies. N2K helps space and cybersecurity professionals grow, learn and stay informed. As the nexus for discovery and connection, we bring you the people, the technology, and the ideas shaping the future of secure innovation. Learn how at N2K.com. N2K Senior Producer is Alice Carruth. Our Producer is Liz Stokes. We're mixed by Elliott Peltzman and Tre Hester with original music by Elliott Peltzman. Our Executive Producer is Jennifer Eiben. Peter Kilpey is our publisher, and I am your host, Maria Varmazis. Thank you for listening. Enjoy the long weekend, everybody, and we'll see you back here on Tuesday. - T minus. (thunder rumbling) (water splashing) [BLANK_AUDIO] 

Similar posts

Stay in the loop on new releases. 

Subscribe below to receive information about new blog posts, podcasts, newsletters, and product information.