
Copernical Team
UNI Bremen involved in AMADEE-20 Mars Simulation

New Curtin study pinpoints likely home of Martian meteorites

Sol 3285: Oh So Close

Hypersonix to use Siemens' software in design of its hydrogen fuelled launchers

SpaceFund Invests in Rhea Space Activity

Laboratory will illuminate formation, composition, activity of comets

NASA, Intuitive Machines announce landing site location for Lunar drill

Boeing gets OK for satellite grid to provide internet from space

TRUTHS shapes up

ESA’s new TRUTHS mission is taking shape. Highlighted today at COP26, this new mission is moving from its feasibility phase into its preliminary design phase. TRUTHS is set to provide measurements of incoming solar radiation and of radiation reflected from Earth back out into space as traceable International System of Units. These measurements will allow changes in Earth’s climate to be detected faster, and they will be used to calibrate data from other satellites. In effect, TRUTHS will be a ‘standards laboratory in space’, setting the ‘gold standard’ for climate measurements.
A mission to explore the methane lakes on Titan

Neither mission will be the first time Titan's surface has been visited, though. That distinction belongs to Huygens—a lander launched with the Cassini probe. Unfortunately, with the relatively limited technology of a probe launched in the late 1990s, it was only able to send data back from the surface for about an hour and a half.