...the who's who,
and the what's what 
of the space industry

Copernical Team

Copernical Team

Wednesday, 10 February 2021 13:31

Take me to your leader: Space diplomacy 101

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Take me to your leader: Space diplomacy 101
Credit: SPACEX

Space has long been seen as the domain of scientists and engineers, but space also needs diplomacy.

But what exactly is space diplomacy and why do we need it?

Professor Melissa de Zwart is a self-described space nerd and the Dean of Adelaide Law School.

She's a board member of ANGELS, a project that provides space legal and regulatory information to the public. She combines her passion for space with her expertise in law and diplomacy.

The dawn of space diplomacy

"Once space became possible, we had the Cold War powers recognize early on that, if they didn't reach international agreement, it was going to be curtains for everyone. Basically, mutually assured destruction," says Melissa.

The US and USSR were worried about Kessler syndrome, where broken pieces of space debris so pollute Earth's orbit that it would be almost impossible to send future satellites to space.

"Now we rely on the space industry for almost every aspect of our lives."

When the world powers set the laws for sending satellites to space, they thought only governments would do it.

But now businesses and even individuals are going to space, and we need new rules.

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Here’s the best place for explorers to harvest ice on Mars
Showing overlap of the northern polar ice cap and the survey area of the SWIM study. Credit: PSI

Water ice, especially any located in the sub-surface, has long been a focal point of Mars exploration efforts. Reasons abound as to why—from the need to grow plants to the need to create more rocket fuel to blast off the planet for a round trip. Most of that effort has focused on the poles of the planet, where most of the water ice has been found.

Unfortunately, these extreme latitudes are also difficult locations for , due to their slack of sunlight and extremely low temperatures. Now, a team from the Planetary Science Institute (PSI) have mapped the density of in a large chunk of the lower , in an effort to help narrow down potential human landing sites at more welcoming latitudes.

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Researcher uses machine learning to classify stellar objects from TESS data
This illustration depicts light curves for a representative eclipsing binary (top) and one of the candidate eclipsing quadruple star systems identified by Adam Friedman. The extra dips caused by additional eclipses in the quadruple system result in a more complicated pattern. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

A game of chess has 20 possible opening moves. Imagine being asked to start a game with tens of millions of openings instead. That was the task assigned to Adam Friedman, a 2020 summer intern at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

Tuesday, 09 February 2021 19:00

At the rim of a crater

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At the rim of a crater Image: At the rim of a crater
Wednesday, 10 February 2021 12:08

How ESA is Helping NASA's Mars lander phone home

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ESA's Trace Gas Orbiter will relay data from NASA's Perseverance rover to ground stations on Earth Image: ESA's Trace Gas Orbiter will relay data from NASA's Perseverance rover to ground stations on Earth
Wednesday, 10 February 2021 15:55

Netherlands in white

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As this Copernicus Sentinel-3 image captured today shows, the Netherlands remains pretty much snow-covered thanks to days of sub-zero temperatures following the country’s first major snowstorm in a decade. Image: As this Copernicus Sentinel-3 image captured today shows, the Netherlands remains pretty much snow-covered thanks to days of sub-zero temperatures following the country’s first major snowstorm in a decade.
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Galileo satellite

Galileo has started testing Open Service Navigation Message Authentication (OSNMA) in its signal-in-space, allowing the first-ever OSNMA-protected position fix to be successfully computed. Testing will continue over the next months, ahead of a so-called ‘public observation’ phase. This is the first-ever transmission of authentication features in open GNSS signals of a global navigation system.

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Key graphic for ESA astronaut selection 2021/22

For the first time in over a decade, the European Space Agency (ESA) is seeking new astronauts. Tune in to ESA Web TV on Tuesday 16 February from 13:00 CET (12:00 GMT) for briefings in six languages and all you need to know.

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Daytona Beach FL (SPX) Feb 10, 2021
Within the constellation Cygnus, an elderly star and its massive companion are having one last hurrah, flinging off mass at an incredible rate before they explode as supernovae and collapse into a black hole. Now, researchers including recent Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University graduate Laura M. Lee have mapped the elderly star's orbit around its oversized and equally ancient partner. In
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