
Copernical Team
Scientists find DNA's code for life in meteorites

Carbon dioxide glaciers are moving at the Martian south pole

Microrobot collectives display versatile movement patterns

Chinese research institutions set to receive 4th batch of lunar samples

Enigmatic rocks on Mars show evidence of a violent origin

Back Through the Buttes! Sols 3456-3457

NASA Chief expects cooperation with Russia on ISS to continue

NASA's moon rocket, spacecraft return for repair after scrubbed test

SpaceX set to launch its latest crew to ISS for NASA

NASA gives green light for OSIRIS-REx spacecraft to visit another asteroid

NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft will swing by Earth to deliver a sample from asteroid Bennu on Sept. 24, 2023. But it won't clock out after that.
NASA has extended the University of Arizona-led mission, which will be renamed OSIRIS-APEX, to study near-Earth asteroid Apophis for 18 months. Apophis will make a close approach to Earth in 2029.
The University of Arizona will lead the mission, which will make its first maneuver toward Apophis 30 days after the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft delivers the sample it collected from Bennu back in October 2020. At that point, the original mission team will split—the sample analysis team will analyze the Bennu sample, while the spacecraft and instrument team transitions to OSIRIS-APEX, which is short for OSIRIS-Apophis Explorer.