
Copernical Team
Meridian Space Command establishes new HQ at Leicester's Space Innovation Hub

Sateliot unveils plan to expand its 5G IoT satellite constellation this year

Indo-Swedish Space collaboration leaps forward with ground station expansion

ISS National Lab announces funding for In-Space Advanced Materials and Manufacturing

Olsen secures UK funding for development of lunar rover drive system

Astroforensics: Pioneering Blood Behavior Research for Space Crime Solving

Dream Chaser spaceplane nears flight readiness with completion of key pre-flight tests

Orbit Fab Announces Strategic Leadership Reorganization to Propel Space Refueling Innovation

Watch Andreas return to Earth

After more than six months on the International Space Station, ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen and the rest of Crew-7 will undock and make their way down to Earth on 11 March 2024 at 13:15 GMT/14:15 CET, splashing down off the coast the Florida on 12 March, at 09:35 GMT / 10:35 CET. Watch the undocking and splashdown on ESA WebTV.
Drones could help map the lunar surface with extreme precision

Exploring the moon has become increasingly more of a focal point lately, especially with a series of landers recently launched with various degrees of success. One of the difficulties those landers and any future human missions face is understanding the terrain they are landing on and potentially traversing in the case of a rover or human. To help fight this problem, a team of researchers from Switzerland has developed a drone concept that could help map out some of the more interesting, potentially hazardous areas to explore on the moon.
Mapping the moon has already been a priority for years. However, some of the more exciting regions, such as the Permanently Shadows Regions (PSR) at the lunar poles that hold a significant amount of water ice, have only been mapped to a resolution of about 1m per pixel in the best images of them. That's including artificial enhancement by AI-backed algorithms.
That level of resolution isn't near enough to provide useful planning data for any potential rover or human missions—a given rover's wheel itself won't even more that in width, let alone hope to traverse an obstacle of that size.