SPACE
Michigan's Spring 2026 Floods: A Dependency Graph from Orbit
Grand River crested April 8 just below major flood. NASA Landsat reveals what an aging dam fleet looks like under rain-on-snow stress in 2026.
NASA Force Is a Dependency Graph, Not a Hiring Surge
NASA + OPM open NASA Force for two-year aerospace engineer hires. Read it as a topology diagram showing which talent pipes are starting to leak.
SPHEREx in 102 Colours: A Federated Model for Cosmic Ice
NASA's SPHEREx mapped Cygnus X ice across 102 infrared bands. A federated-model logic AEC readers will recognise — and a dependency-graph warning.
CRS-34 Docks at Harmony: The Quiet Topology of a 25-Year Building
SpaceX CRS-34 docked at the ISS on May 17 with 6,500 lbs of science. The real lesson for architects: draw your project's real dependency graph this week.
NASA Becomes a Customer: The MDA Space Webinar and Your Real Dependency Graph
NASA's CSDA program just added MDA Space's C-band SAR. The topology shift matters more than the data — and your dependency graph should show it.
ISS CRS-24: What a Falcon 9 cargo flight reveals about robotics and quantum research in orbit
What the Northrop Grumman CRS-24 cargo flight to the ISS reveals to architects and BIM engineers about robotics, constraints, and resilience.
Artemis II Returns: What a Crewed Lunar Flyby Teaches AEC About Extreme-Environment Systems Design
Artemis II splashed down. Here's what Orion's thermal, life-support, and navigation loops teach architects and engineers about resilient systems design.
Artemis II is back: What 695,081 miles in Deep Space means for AEC professionals
695,081 miles, 14 countries, one validation protocol: What Artemis II means for architects and engineers in DACH.
Artemis II Splashdown: A Perfect Test Flight — and the Hardest Work Is Still Ahead
Artemis II returned four astronauts from lunar distance on April 10, 2026. Here's the honest systems audit of what NASA still needs to close before 2028.
NASA's NUARC WindShaper: 567 Programmable Wind Pixels — and a Swiss Company Behind the Hardware
NASA Ames' NUARC facility uses a Geneva-built WindShaper — 1,134 Python-controlled fans — to simulate urban airflow for eVTOL and drone autonomy research.