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Nominee would succeed Christopher Scolese as head of the nation’s spy satellite agency

The contracts are part of the ‘Kronos’ program that aims to replace legacy tools with commercial software

Boundaries don't feel like peace at first. They feel like guilt wearing a new coat.

The guilt that follows a new boundary isn't evidence you did something wrong. It's a nervous system updating a social contract you never consciously signed — and learning to read that signal correctly changes everything.

The post Boundaries don’t feel like peace at first. They feel like guilt wearing a new coat. appeared first on Space Daily.

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The people who struggle to receive compliments weren't taught modesty. They were taught that being seen clearly was dangerous.

The reflex to deflect praise often has nothing to do with humility. It's a nervous system trained early to treat visibility as a threat — and the pattern is more fixable than it feels.

The post The people who struggle to receive compliments weren’t taught modesty. They were taught that being seen clearly was dangerous. appeared first on Space Daily.

Ames's contributions to Artemis II

Wednesday, 22 April 2026 15:20
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Organized by the International Astronautical Federation (IAF) and hosted by the Rwanda Space Agency (RSA), the 2nd IAF Global Space Conference on Climate Change (GLOC 2026) will take place from […]

The people who are hardest on themselves in private are often the same people who defend everyone else's mistakes in public without hesitation

The people who are brutal to themselves in private are often the most forgiving people in public. The asymmetry isn't inconsistency, it's a pattern with clear psychological roots and a real cost.

The post The people who are hardest on themselves in private are often the same people who defend everyone else’s mistakes in public without hesitation appeared first on Space Daily.

I have a friend, Mal, who can take an hour to make a decision most people would make in four seconds. What to order at dinner. Whether to accept an invitation. Which Airbnb to book. Anyone who doesn’t know him well would assume he’s indecisive or neurotic. He isn’t either of those things. He’s something […]

The post Deep thinkers often don’t realize it but psychology says the way they make decisions is fundamentally different from most people appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who laugh the loudest in group settings are often the ones who go home and decompress for three days before they can feel like themselves again

The people who seem most at ease in group settings are often running expensive internal performances, and the three-day recovery that follows reveals what the laugh was really costing them.

The post The people who laugh the loudest in group settings are often the ones who go home and decompress for three days before they can feel like themselves again appeared first on Space Daily.

Video: 00:03:28

English

From 13 to 17 April, ESA’s Centre for Earth Observation in Frascati, ESRIN, hosted the 2026 edition of ESA School Days, welcoming students from across Italy for a week dedicated to space and science.

Throughout the week, participants took part in presentations, interactive laboratories and hands-on activities, exploring how ESA studies our planet and the wider Universe. Activities included: sessions dedicated to European launchers, Ariane 6 and Vega C, as well as the future reusable vehicle Space Rider, model rocket launch demonstrations, as well as meteorite and asteroid workshops and guided visits to the Earth Observation Multimedia Centre.

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