Copernical Team
China accuses US of 'paranoid delusion' over huge innovation bill
 Beijing on Wednesday accused Washington of "paranoid delusion" after the US Senate passed a sweeping industrial policy bill aimed at countering the surging economic threat from China. 
America's political parties overcame partisan divisions to support pumping more than $170 billion into research and development, one of the most significant achievements in Congress since Joe Biden's presidency                Local lockdowns brought fast global ozone reductions
As the coronavirus pandemic slowed global commerce to a crawl in early 2020, emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) - which create ozone, a danger to human health and to climate - decreased 15% globally, with local reductions as high as 50%, according to a study led by scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. As a result of the lower NOx emissions, by June 2020, global                NASA Collaboration Using Harvard Technology Could Advance Earth Science from Orbit
Sunlight traveling through the atmosphere becomes polarized in different ways as it is scattered by water vapor, ice, aerosols created by living organisms, dust, and other particulates. 
Measuring that polarization lets scientists extrapolate what is in the atmosphere, and the next generation of polarimeters for the job could benefit from a new technology developed by researchers at Harvard                UP42 Expands Optical and SAR Data Offering with SI Imaging Services of Korea
UP42 and SI Imaging Services (SIIS) of Daejeon, South Korea, have signed an agreement to make imagery from the KOMPSAT satellites available on the UP42 marketplace and developer platform. The deal includes high-resolution optical imagery from KOMPSAT-3 and -3A, and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data from KOMPSAT-5. 
KOMPSAT imagery is a valuable addition to the more than 50 geospatial data                Asteroid 16 Psyche might not be what scientists expected
The widely studied metallic asteroid known as 16 Psyche was long thought to be the exposed iron core of a small planet that failed to form during the earliest days of the solar system. But new University of Arizona-led research suggests that the asteroid might not be as metallic or dense as once thought, and hints at a much different origin story. 
Scientists are interested in 16 Psyche bec                Manned space mission preps for takeoff
China's upcoming manned mission - Shenzhou XII - is expected to set off from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern China's Gobi Desert to the Tianhe core module of the nation's space station. 
A Long March 2F carrier rocket with the Shenzhou XII spacecraft on top of it was moved to its launch pad at the space complex on Wednesday evening, according to the China Manned Space Agency                New spacecraft will use lasers to transmit video, data in seconds
 New space missions being launched this summer will attempt to revolutionize space communications by using laser beams to quickly transmit large amounts of data, including high-definition video from the moon. 
 Two missions by the U.S. government will test such lasers, which use invisible, infrared light beams. 
 NASA's Laser Communications Relay Demonstration will explore the best wa                Wake Forest engineers win NASA's Vascular Tissue Challenge
 A pair of engineering teams from Wake Forest University took home first and second place in NASA's Vascular Tissue Challenge, the space agency announced Wednesday. 
 Both teams used slightly different techniques to 3D-print vascularized liver tissue in the lab. Now, the two engineering teams will get the opportunity to test their breakthrough tissue models on the International Space Stati                NASA's Mars helicopter Ingenuity flies for 7th time
 NASA's Mars helicopter Ingenuity moved to a new landing site about 115 feet away from its original position on the Red Planet during its seventh flight. 
 The space agency announced Tuesday's successful new flight, along with a photo the aerial drone shot of its own shadow during flight. 
 "With each flight we gain additional real world info on the performance of the rotor and its th                Perseverance Rover Begins Its First Science Campaign on Mars
On June 1, NASA's Perseverance Mars rover kicked off the science phase of its mission by leaving the "Octavia E. Butler" landing site. Until recently, the rover has been undergoing systems tests, or commissioning, and supporting the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter's month of flight tests. 
During the first few weeks of this first science campaign, the mission team will drive to a low-lying scenic                