Science

Axiom Reveals Ax-1 Research Portfolio

Axiom Space will conduct around 25 research experiments on its forthcoming ISS mission, the Houston company said Tuesday. Ax-1’s research portfolio includes senescent cell studies, a two-way hologram demo, and experiments in disciplines that run the gamut from astrophysics to neurology. 

Ax-1, 101: Axiom Mission 1 launches in 94 days, give or take. Beyond the research bounties it will bring to orbit, Ax-1 has the added significance of being the first private crewed mission to the ISS. 

Axiom is developing human-rated space infrastructure, and brick by brick, building its way to a free-flying LEO outpost. The company was started in 2016 by Michael Suffredini, who had previously worked across town as ISS program manager at NASA. 

  • Axiom has secured a $140M NASA contract to attach a commercial habitable module to the ISS. It’s raised $171.5M to date, per PitchBook.
  • Ax-1 tickets were $55M apiece. Michael López-Alegría, an Axiom VP and former NASA astronaut, will be the mission’s commander. 

The long view: Rome and space stations aren’t built in a day. The privatization of human spaceflight activities in LEO takes time. While the gradual handoff happens, NASA will be a key partner for Axiom and others, as an anchor customer and orbital host.

Related Stories
CivilDOGE CutsScience

Leaked NASA Budget Spotlights Isaacman’s Challenge

President Donald Trump reportedly wants to cut NASA’s budget by $5B, or 20%. The Planetary Society said the cuts would “plunge NASA into a dark age.”

BusinessISSScience

Honda Will Hitch a Ride on Dream Chaser to the ISS

Honda will put its decades of work on hydrogen fuel cell technologies to the test in orbit.

LEOMilitaryScience

DoD Taps Slingshot to Track Adversaries on Orbit

Using photometric sensors, Slingshot can spot an orbital object’s unique light-based “fingerprint” to help the DoD understand the technology that America’s adversaries are deploying in space.

BusinessInternationalScience

Varda Conducts First Reentry Mission into Australia

Varda’s second reentry capsule W-2 landed safely in the dust of Southern Launch’s Koonibba Test Range in Australia yesterday.