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Artemis II: The Engineering, Operational, and Scientific Paradigm of Returning to Lunar Orbit
Abstract The Artemis II mission, currently targeted for launch in early 2026, stands as the pivotal "gate" in the United States' and international partners' architecture for sustained deep space exploration. Distinct from the Apollo lunar sorties of the 20th century, which were driven by geopolitical urgency and utilized single-use architecture for short-duration stays, Artemis II is a validation flight for a reusable, long-term infrastructure designed to support a permanent

Bryan White
Jan 817 min read


India’s Orbital Ambition: Analyzing the Technical Creation of the Gaganyaan-1
Abstract The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) stands at the precipice of a defining era with the imminent launch of the Gaganyaan-1 (G1) mission. Scheduled for the first quarter of 2026, this uncrewed orbital test flight represents the cornerstone of the Indian Human Spaceflight Programme (IHSP). It serves as the primary qualification vehicle for the Human-Rated Launch Vehicle Mark 3 (HLVM3), the Orbital Module (OM) architecture, and the complex integrated network of

Bryan White
Jan 819 min read


More Than Just a Rock: Discovering Water and Organics on Asteroid Bennu
Abstract The successful return of the OSIRIS-REx Sample Return Capsule (SRC) in September 2023 has provided the planetary science community with an unprecedented reservoir of pristine extraterrestrial material. Analysis of the 121.6 grams of regolith from asteroid (101955) Bennu has revealed a celestial body of immense chemical complexity: a carrier of ancient presolar grains derived from supernovae, a host to water-soluble magnesium-sodium phosphates indicative of a paleocea

Bryan White
Dec 5, 202514 min read


The Sound of Sparks: Electrostatic Phenomena on Mars and the Implications for Planetary Science
1. Introduction: The Electrified Red Planet The exploration of Mars has been defined by a progressive unveiling of its dynamic nature. Once thought to be a geologically dead world, frozen in time, the Red Planet has revealed itself through decades of robotic scrutiny to be a place of active processes: shifting dunes, seasonal volatile cycles, and ubiquitous dust transport. Among the most persistent and elusive questions in Martian planetary science has been the existence of a

Bryan White
Nov 30, 202514 min read


Decoding the Storm: Analysis of the November 2025 X-Class Solar Flares
The solar-terrestrial interaction represents one of the most dynamic and consequential frontiers in modern astrophysics and geophysics. In November 2025, the near-Earth space environment experienced a severe and complex perturbation driven by a sequence of homologous intense solar eruptive events originating from Active Region 4274 (AR4274). This period, characterized by four major X-class solar flares including an X5.1 event, provided a unique observational window into the c

Bryan White
Nov 24, 202522 min read
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