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A Falcon 9 rocket launched the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO)’s NROL-149 mission from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California, at 8:19 a.m. EST on December 17, as per reports. The flight carried next-generation spy satellites designed for the United States’ intelligence needs. The reusable first-stage booster successfully landed on the drone ship “Of Course I Still Love You” in the Pacific Ocean, marking SpaceX’s 384th recovery of an orbital-class rocket. According to mission details shared by SpaceX, this was the company’s 127th launch of the year.

Details of the Mission and Payload

The NROL-149 mission is reported to be part of a broader initiative by the NRO to deploy “proliferated architecture” satellites, described in earlier mission updates as smaller, resilient spacecraft equipped for advanced reconnaissance capabilities. These satellites, believed to be based on SpaceX’s Starlink platform but modified for intelligence purposes, are intended to enhance national security operations, as per sources. The NRO confirmed in a post on X (formerly Twitter) that this launch concluded its eighth and final mission for 2024.

Booster Reuse and Flight History

According to sources, the Falcon 9 booster used in this mission had flown twice before, deploying other NRO satellites (NROL-113 and NROL-167) and NASA’s DART asteroid impact mission. SpaceX’s commitment to reusability was highlighted again with this successful recovery. Details regarding the deployment of the NROL-149 payloads remain undisclosed due to the classified nature of national security missions.

A Year of Proliferated Architecture Missions

As per reports, this marks the sixth proliferated architecture mission for the NRO this year, with previous launches — NROL-146, NROL-186, NROL-113, NROL-167, and NROL-126 — also utilising SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rockets. The series represents a shift towards deploying numerous smaller satellites to improve resilience and capability in space-based intelligence, though official specifics remain classified.

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UC San Diego Engineers Create Wearable Patch That Controls Robots Even in Chaotic Motion

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UC San Diego engineers have developed a soft, AI-enabled wearable patch that can interpret gestures with high accuracy even during vigorous or chaotic movement. The armband uses stretchable sensors, a custom deep-learning model, and on-chip processing to clean motion signals in real time. This breakthrough could enable intuitive robot control for rehabilitation, indus…

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Battery Breakthrough Could Make Solar Panels Cheaper and More Powerful

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Researchers in China have set a new 27.2 percent efficiency record for perovskite solar cells by fixing chlorine-ion clumping, a major barrier to performance. Their simple potassium-based method creates a uniform film and boosts long-term stability, marking a major step toward commercial adoption and more reliable low-cost solar energy.

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Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Photographed Beside Distant Galaxy in Rare Cosmic Shot

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A new image of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS captures its glowing tails and a distant barred spiral galaxy, creating a dramatic cosmic overlap. Astronomers say the comet’s unusual features remain natural despite online speculation. With its closest Earth approach in December, researchers are preparing for sharper spacecraft images expected to reveal even more detail.

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