
Copernical Team
DARPA Comb Technologies Yield Breakthroughs in Defense and Civilian Sectors

Lucy boxed to go

Department of Energy to provide $100 million for high energy physics research

Boeing postpones Starliner capsule launch attempt over valve issue

Finding the cause of a fatal problem in rocket engine combustors

Iridium granted trio of regulatory approvals in Japan

Life in space: Preparing for an increasingly tangible reality

The rise of oxygen on early Earth linked to changing planetary rotation rate

Space station mishap caused orbiting lab to rotate 1 1/2 times, NASA says

German startups launch mini-rocket challenge to SpaceX and co.

Car-manufacturing powerhouse Germany is rushing to join the private sector space race as it looks to ride a boom in mini-launchers for small satellites and compete with major US firms such as SpaceX.
Three projects in particular are making Germany a serious player in the race to provide mini-launchers for the increasing number of small satellites which observe the Earth and provide connectivity for the internet of things and smart vehicles.
At the end of July, German company Rocket Factory Augsburg (RFA) carried out a first successful test of its "RFA One" rocket, igniting the engine for eight seconds at its development site in Kiruna, Sweden.
The rocket's "staged combustion" system is used by Elon Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin, but is yet to be rolled out in Europe.