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Health & Science2h 45m ago
Katalyst Space announced $12M in funding to support the development of its first GEO-capable robotic servicing spacecraft—called NEXUS—which is scheduled to launch its debut mission in 2027.
Earth orbit, Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO)
Who
Katalyst Space, Geodesic Capital, Fortitude Ventures, NASA, Ghonhee Lee, Northrop Grumman
What
Katalyst Space announced $12M in funding to support the development of its first GEO-capable robotic servicing spacecraft—called NEXUS—which is scheduled to launch its debut mission in 2027.
When
Wed, 17 Jun 2026 12:22:26 GMT · 2h 45m ago
Where
Earth orbit, Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO) ·
Why
The $12M funding will support the development of the NEXUS spacecraft for in-space servicing capabilities, with a primary goal of demonstrating broader applications beyond routine life-extension missions.
The Frontline Impact
How this affects you
Katalyst's new funding and spacecraft development could expand in-space satellite servicing capabilities, potentially influencing orbital infrastructure construction and the economics of commercial space operations. The upcoming LINK mission to boost the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory is an immediate demonstration of this technology.
Story chain
3 events in this thread- Currently Reading2h 45m agoKatalyst Space announced $12M in funding to support the development of its first GEO-capable robotic servicing spacecraft—called NEXUS—which is scheduled to launch its debut mission in 2027.
- Health & Science2h 45m agoKatalyst Space announced $12M in funding yesterday to support the development of its first GEO-capable robotic servicing spacecraft—called NEXUS.Open article
- Health & Science2h 45m agoKatalyst Space announced $12M in funding to support development of its GEO-capable robotic servicing spacecraft, NEXUS, and will launch its LINK robotic spacecraft on June 27.Open article
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