Featured Episodes 1 April 2019 66: Robotic Exploration with SpaceIL and Hayabusa2 Dive into the commercial and government robotic probes that give humans a presence beyond our planet.
Featured Episodes 28 February 2019 65: Commercial Crew Takes Flight to LEO and Beyond SpaceX DM-2 launches Friday night and NASA's NEXTSTEP-2 opens a pathway to commercial lunar landers
Featured Episodes 14 February 2019 64: SpaceX Raptor Breathes Fire and Virgin Galactic Takes Flight Layoffs hit both companies despite huge milestones in commercial space
IREC 13 September 2018 63: Student Innovation at Spaceport America Cup 2018 In the New Mexico heat, student engineers prove their mettle with high powered rocketry and learn how to work as a team along the way
Featured Episodes 8 August 2018 62: On-Demand Satellite Constellations with York Space Systems' Charles Beames Mass-produced satellites backed by an all-in-one operations system enables new space applications to be tried quicker than ever before.
Featured Episodes 22 June 2018 61: Unlocking the Potential of Synthetic Aperture Radar with ICEYE's Pekka Laurila A constellation of radar imaging microsatellites could enable new insights for business and science
Episodes 16 June 2018 60: SpaceX Flight Control, CRS-15 Payloads, and Chinese Lunar Missions The dark side of the moon will soon be getting company from a Chinese lander, and Elon Musk's SpaceX plans to build their own Avengers style tower.
Featured Episodes 4 June 2018 59: Copenhagen Suborbitals with Mads Wilson An ambitious volunteer space program aims to send a human past the Karman line with rockets built from scratch.
Featured Episodes 31 May 2018 58: Terraforming Mars: Challenges and Misconceptions Getting humans to Mars is a tough challenge, but making it a place humans want to stay will be even harder.
Featured Episodes 21 May 2018 57: Mars Rover Operations with Doug Klein, JPL Sampling Systems Engineer We learn how Curiosity is driven from 150 million miles away, the current challenges the rover is facing, and what's next for Mars 2020.