Countdown: America is going back to the Moon and SpaceX holds the key to what comes afterThis is the second flight of the Cygnus XL configuration, which debuted on NG-23 in September 2025 and offers a roughly 20% increase in cargo capacity over the previous design. Northrop Grumman switched to Falcon 9 launches after its own Antares 230+ rocket was retired in 2023 following supply chain disruptions from the war in Ukraine. The upcoming cargo includes a new module to advance quantum research, and an investigation studying blood stem cell production in microgravity with potential therapeutic applications on Earth. The NG-24 mission is one piece of a much larger picture for SpaceX and the U.S. government. As Teslarati reported, SpaceX has become an indispensable launch provider for U.S. national security missions, picking up a $178.5 million Space Force contract in April 2026 to launch missile tracking satellites, while also holding roughly $4 billion in NASA contracts tied to the Artemis lunar program. At a time when no other American rocket can match the Falcon 9’s combination of reliability, cost, and launch cadence, Saturday’s mission is a straightforward reminder of how much the U.S. government now depends on a single commercial provider to keep its astronauts supplied and its satellites flying. The post SpaceX is keeping the Space Station alive again this weekend appeared first on TESLARATI.
ADM NEWS | SpaceX is targeting April 11 for the launch of Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus XL cargo spacecraft to the International Space Station, carrying over 11,000 pounds of supplies, science hardware, and equipment for the Expedition 73 crew aboard.
Liftoff is set for 7:41 a.m. ET from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, with a backup window available April 12 at 7:18 a.m.
ET. The mission, officially designated NG-24 under NASA’s Commercial Resupply Services program, names its spacecraft the S.S.
Steven R. Nagel in honor of the NASA astronaut who flew four Space Shuttle missions and logged over 723 hours in space before his death in 2014.
Unlike SpaceX’s own Dragon capsule, which docks autonomously, Cygnus relies on NASA astronauts to capture it using a robotic arm before it is berthed to the space station’s module for unloading. When the mission wraps up around October, the Cygnus will depart loaded with station trash and burn up on reentry.
Related Post
ARK’s SpaceX IPO Guide makes a compelling case on why $1.75T may not be the
ARK Invest, which holds SpaceX as its largest Venture Fund position at 17% of net assets, has published a detailed investor guide to why a SpaceX IPO may be grounded in a .75 trillion target valuation. The financial case starts with Starlink, SpaceX’s satellite internet constellation, which has surpassed 10 million active […]
21 Apr 2026 - 10:50 AM
Orion Spacecraft Sets Record for Furthest Distance Travelled by Humans in Space
The Orion spacecraft has established a new record for the furthest distance travelled by a crewed vehicle in human history during its Artemis II mission, NASA has announced. In a live broadcast, the space agency confirmed that the vessel reached its closest approach to the Moon, marking a pivotal milestone in lunar […]
7 Apr 2026 - 1:38 AM
China Continues to Foster, Strengthen Space Computing Industry
China will continue to develop and strengthen its space computing industry, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said. According to China Central Television (CCTV), space-based computing power refers to deploying computational capabilities in space and using satellite networks to achieve seamless coverage. Compared to traditional land-based data centres, space computing […]
4 Apr 2026 - 12:02 PM
Elon Musk Calls Out $2 Trillion SpaceX IPO Valuation As ‘BS’
Elon Musk is quick to call out any false information regarding him or his companies on his social media platform, known as X. A recent report that claimed SpaceX was aiming to go public with an IPO in the coming weeks at a massive valuation of $2 trillion was called out by […]
3 Apr 2026 - 9:20 PM