Space Industry Cheat Sheet: Golden Dome Gets $10B Bigger While Artemis Heads Back to the Pad

The space sec­tor does­n’t take breaks, and this week deliv­ered a full slate of sto­ries that mat­ter — from a mis­sile defense bud­get that just got big­ger to a moon rock­et that final­ly made it back to the launch­pad. Buried in the news cycle were two insti­tu­tion­al account­abil­i­ty moments the defense acqui­si­tion com­mu­ni­ty should not over­look. Here’s what hap­pened, why it mat­ters, and what to watch.


1. Golden Dome Gets a $10 Billion Budget Upgrade — Because Space Is Now the Foundation

The head­line num­ber is hard to ignore: the Pen­ta­gon has increased the cost esti­mate for the Gold­en Dome mis­sile defense archi­tec­ture by $10 bil­lion, bring­ing the total pro­gram esti­mate to $185 bil­lion. The dri­ver isn’t bureau­crat­ic bloat — it’s the accel­er­at­ed demand for space-based sens­ing, track­ing, and data trans­port capa­bil­i­ties that the orig­i­nal esti­mate underweighted.

Three spe­cif­ic areas are dri­ving the increase:

  • HBTSS (Hyper­son­ic and Bal­lis­tic Track­ing Space Sen­sor): The on-orbit sys­tem designed to track hyper­son­ic glide vehi­cles from their mid­course phase through ter­mi­nal approach
  • Space Force Data Trans­port Lay­er: The com­mu­ni­ca­tions back­bone that con­nects sen­sors to shoot­ers in near-real time
  • Space-Based AMTI: Mov­ing tar­get indi­ca­tor capa­bil­i­ty applied to air­borne threats, not just bal­lis­tic missiles

What’s most inter­est­ing this week is the for­mal­iza­tion of the Space Data Net­work (SDN) — the inte­grat­ed com­mu­ni­ca­tions archi­tec­ture that makes all of this actu­al­ly work togeth­er. The SDN pulls togeth­er pro­lif­er­at­ed LEO and MEO SATCOM con­stel­la­tions into a coher­ent com­mand and con­trol path­way, turn­ing satel­lite data into action­able tar­get­ing infor­ma­tion fast enough to mat­ter. This isn’t a con­cept paper any­more. It’s a program.

Along­side the bud­get news, Space Sys­tems Com­mand award­ed a $446.8 mil­lion Ground Man­age­ment and Inte­gra­tion (GMI) agree­ment to Kratos Tech­nol­o­gy & Train­ing Solu­tions on March 17 to sup­port the launch and oper­a­tions of Epoch 1 and Epoch 2 for the Resilient Mis­sile Warn­ing and Track­ing (MWT) archi­tec­ture in Medi­um Earth Orbit. The first Epoch 1 satel­lites are expect­ed to launch in the sec­ond half of 2026.

Indus­try also demon­strat­ed the com­mand and con­trol (C2) lay­er for Gold­en Dome this week — a live con­sor­tium demon­stra­tion from nine defense firms con­firm­ing the archi­tec­ture is on track toward ini­tial oper­a­tional capa­bil­i­ty in 2028, with full objec­tive capa­bil­i­ty tar­get­ed for 2035.

Why it mat­ters: This isn’t just a mis­sile defense pro­gram any­more. Gold­en Dome is becom­ing the orga­niz­ing frame­work for U.S. space-based ISR, track­ing, and bat­tle man­age­ment. The $185 bil­lion num­ber will get head­lines, but the oper­a­tional archi­tec­ture under­neath it is what actu­al­ly changes the deter­rence cal­cu­lus. When the SDN is oper­a­tional and the MWT con­stel­la­tion is in orbit, we’ll have per­sis­tent, all-domain threat track­ing from space at a scale that cur­rent­ly does­n’t exist. That is worth every dol­lar — if the pro­gram does­n’t become a “boon­dog­gle of bad ideas” in exe­cu­tion. The Kratos award and the C2 demon­stra­tion sug­gest the pro­gram is mov­ing with actu­al urgency. Watch the Epoch 1 launch time­line closely.

Sources: Air & Space Forces Mag­a­zine, Defense Scoop, Space Sys­tems Com­mand, Air & Space Forces Mag­a­zine — C2 Demo


2. Artemis II Is Back on the Pad — And April 1 Is a Real Launch Date

On the night of March 19 into March 20, NASA’s Artemis II Space Launch Sys­tem and Ori­on space­craft made their sec­ond roll­out to Launch Com­plex 39B at Kennedy Space Cen­ter. The 4‑mile jour­ney from the Vehi­cle Assem­bly Build­ing start­ed around 12:20 a.m. EDT and took rough­ly 11 hours.

This is the sec­ond time the vehi­cle has made this trip. The orig­i­nal roll­out on Jan­u­ary 17 was fol­lowed by a return to the VAB on Feb­ru­ary 25 after engi­neers iden­ti­fied a heli­um flow issue in the rock­et’s upper stage dur­ing a wet dress rehearsal. Addi­tion­al main­te­nance and sys­tem retest­ing were per­formed before the team was con­fi­dent enough to return to the pad.

With the rock­et now at the launch­pad, NASA is tar­get­ing a wet dress rehearsal ahead of a launch win­dow that opens April 1, 2026, and extends through April 6. The crew — Com­man­der Reid Wise­man, Pilot Vic­tor Glover, Mis­sion Spe­cial­ist Christi­na Koch, and Cana­di­an Space Agency Mis­sion Spe­cial­ist Jere­my Hansen — entered quar­an­tine in Hous­ton on March 18.

Artemis II will be the first crewed flight of the Artemis pro­gram: a 10-day jour­ney around the Moon and back. No lunar land­ing — this is the deep-space shake­out of the human-rat­ed SLS/Orion stack before any­one steps on the surface.

Why it mat­ters: The orig­i­nal Artemis sched­ule has slipped so many times that the pro­gram’s cred­i­bil­i­ty has tak­en real hits. Get­ting back to the pad after a real tech­ni­cal prob­lem was resolved — not waived — is the right answer. The April win­dow is legit­i­mate; the crew is in quar­an­tine. If the wet dress rehearsal clears with­out major find­ings, we’re look­ing at human­i­ty’s first crewed deep-space flight since Apol­lo 17 in Decem­ber 1972. Fifty-three years is long enough. Watch for the wet dress rehearsal results this week.

Sources: NASA, Space.com, Space­flight Now


3. NVIDIA Brings Data-Center-Class AI to Orbit

At GTC 2026, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang announced the com­pa­ny’s entry into space com­put­ing with a new suite of hard­ware pur­pose-built for the orbital envi­ron­ment. The head­line prod­uct is the Space‑1 Vera Rubin Mod­ule, a com­put­ing plat­form designed to deliv­er up to 25 times more AI com­pute than NVIDI­A’s H100 GPU while oper­at­ing with­in the size, weight, and pow­er con­straints of a spacecraft.

NVIDIA is also field­ing the IGX Thor and Jet­son Orin plat­forms now — the Space‑1 mod­ule is still com­ing. Cur­rent cus­tomers already using NVIDI­A’s space com­put­ing tech­nol­o­gy include Aether­flux, Axiom Space, Kepler Com­mu­ni­ca­tions, Plan­et Labs, Sophia Space, and Starcloud.

The prob­lem these plat­forms solve is real: satel­lites gen­er­ate enor­mous vol­umes of data dai­ly, and today all of it has to be down­linked to Earth for pro­cess­ing. That cre­ates laten­cy, band­width bot­tle­necks, and depen­dence on ground infra­struc­ture. Mov­ing AI infer­ence on-orbit — pro­cess­ing imagery, sig­nals, and sen­sor data before trans­mis­sion — cuts laten­cy, reduces down­link require­ments, and enables faster autonomous deci­sion-mak­ing in space.

Why it mat­ters: For the com­mer­cial space sec­tor, this is a tran­si­tion point. In-space com­put­ing has been a near-term aspi­ra­tion for years; NVIDI­A’s hard­ware com­mit­ment with named cus­tomers sig­nals that the eco­nom­ics are get­ting real. For the defense side, on-orbit AI pro­cess­ing is direct­ly rel­e­vant to ISR, mis­sile track­ing, and space domain aware­ness — the same mis­sion threads run­ning through Gold­en Dome. Expect defense con­trac­tors to be the next wave of cus­tomers once reli­a­bil­i­ty data accu­mu­lates. Pay atten­tion to what Plan­et Labs does with this; they are the canary in the coal mine for applied orbital AI.

Sources: Pay­load Space, NVIDIA


4. The Pentagon’s Top Weapons Tester Has Notes on ATLAS

The Direc­tor of Oper­a­tional Test & Eval­u­a­tion (DOT&E) released its annu­al report on March 16, and the Space Force’s Advanced Track­ing and Launch Analy­sis Sys­tem (ATLAS) earned an uncom­fort­able chapter.

ATLAS was approved for ini­tial oper­a­tions by the Space Force last Sep­tem­ber, described at the time as a “rev­o­lu­tion­ary leap for­ward for our warfight­ers.” DOT&E’s report, cov­er­ing test­ing con­duct­ed pri­or to that accep­tance, found that ATLAS “as test­ed, did not con­tain the min­i­mum viable capa­bil­i­ty nec­es­sary for SPADOC decom­mis­sion­ing” — where SPADOC is the Space Defense Oper­a­tions Cen­ter, a 1980s-era com­mand and con­trol sys­tem the Space Force has been try­ing to replace for years.

L3Harris is devel­op­ing the pro­gram, with Space Sys­tems Com­mand serv­ing as the lead inte­gra­tor. ATLAS marks the ini­tial phase of a larg­er Space C2 mod­ern­iza­tion ini­tia­tive. A Space Force offi­cial told Air & Space Forces Mag­a­zine that Com­bat Forces Com­mand has a “delib­er­ate plan” to decom­mis­sion SPADOC this year but did not pro­vide details about the remain­ing deficiencies.

Why it mat­ters: Soft­ware inte­gra­tion issues have cost this pro­gram near­ly three years and already placed it on the then-acqui­si­tion lead­er­ship’s watch­list. The DOT&E report isn’t claim­ing that ATLAS fails — it’s say­ing it was­n’t ready to replace SPADOC when the ser­vice approved it. The Space Force’s cred­i­bil­i­ty hinges on whether the delib­er­ate decom­mis­sion­ing plan includes enforce­able steps or is just a time­line that is like­ly to slip again. C2 mod­ern­iza­tion is fun­da­men­tal to every­thing else the Space Force aims to achieve, includ­ing Gold­en Dome inte­gra­tion. You can devel­op all the sen­sors you want, but if the C2 lay­er does­n’t per­form reli­ably, the oper­a­tional pic­ture collapses.

Source: Air & Space Forces Magazine


5. Two Quiet Wins the Space Force Doesn’t Advertise Enough

Two oth­er sto­ries from the week deserve more atten­tion than they got.

EPS‑R Achieves Oper­a­tional Accep­tance: On March 20, the Space Force announced that the Enhanced Polar Sys­tem – Recap­i­tal­iza­tion (EPS‑R) achieved oper­a­tional accep­tance. EPS‑R pro­vides secure, jam-resis­tant satel­lite com­mu­ni­ca­tions cov­er­age in the Arc­tic — the same region where con­test­ed peer com­pe­ti­tion is increas­ing­ly focused. This extends pro­tect­ed polar SATCOM capa­bil­i­ty into the 2030s. It isn’t flashy, but the polar region SATCOM gap has been a real vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty. Clos­ing it matters.

GPS III SV-10 Mov­ing to SpaceX Fal­con 9: The final GPS III satel­lite will now launch on a SpaceX Fal­con 9 after Unit­ed Launch Alliance’s Vul­can rock­et was ground­ed in Feb­ru­ary due to per­sis­tent sol­id rock­et boost­er issues. GPS is foun­da­tion­al infra­struc­ture — for the mil­i­tary and every­one else. Mov­ing the launch to a proven vehi­cle was the right call. ULA’s Vul­can reli­a­bil­i­ty issues remain a real pro­gram man­age­ment sto­ry worth tracking.

Sources: Space Force, Break­ing Defense


What to Watch Next Week

  • Artemis II wet dress rehearsal results — this is the final sig­nif­i­cant tech­ni­cal gate before the April 1 launch.
  • Gold­en Dome Con­gres­sion­al response — $185 bil­lion invites appro­pri­a­tors to ask hard ques­tions; watch for hear­ings or statements
  • ATLAS decom­mis­sion­ing time­line — will the Space Force pub­lish a spe­cif­ic sched­ule or keep it vague?
  • ULA Vul­can inves­ti­ga­tion updates — two GPS launch­es now redi­rect­ed; the ques­tion is whether Vul­can returns to flight in 2026 at all

The thread run­ning through all of this is inte­gra­tion, not as a buzz­word, but as a hard oper­a­tional require­ment. Gold­en Dome only works if the SDN moves data fast enough. ATLAS only mat­ters if it actu­al­ly replaces SPADOC. Artemis only val­i­dates the archi­tec­ture if the wet dress rehearsal does not sur­face anoth­er tech­ni­cal ghost. NVIDI­A’s on-orbit com­pute only changes the ISR cal­cu­lus if the defense com­mu­ni­ty moves fast enough to adopt it. EPS‑R and GPS III SV-10 are already doing what they are sup­posed to do, and nobody is writ­ing head­lines about them, which is exact­ly the point. This busi­ness rewards pro­grams that per­form qui­et­ly and pun­ish­es those that gen­er­ate press releas­es before they earn them. The space sec­tor is build­ing the archi­tec­ture that will define the next fifty years of Amer­i­can deter­rence. What hap­pens over the next few weeks, on the launch­pad, in front of appro­pri­a­tors, and in the C2 soft­ware stack, will tell us whether we are ahead of that time­line or behind it. We can­not afford to be behind it.


Pax ab Space

Clin­ton Austin is a Senior Busi­ness Devel­op­ment Direc­tor for GDIT who cov­ers the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Space Force, and the Mis­sile Defense Agency.

The views expressed are those of the author and do not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflect the offi­cial pol­i­cy or posi­tion of Gen­er­al Dynam­ics Infor­ma­tion Technology.

March 23, 2026

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