
Copernical Team
Rocket Lab signs deal with Leidos to launch 4 HASTE missions

Earth from Space: Blooms in the Gulf of Finland

Technology to boost high-speed satellite connectivity

British electronics specialist Filtronic is developing advanced technology that will enable next-generation satellite constellations to deliver high-speed broadband internet coverage.
Fitness tracker beyond Earth

One of the experiments during ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen’s mission will track his health and body vital signs during his daily exercise in space.
Musk, Zuckerberg visit US congress to discuss AI

Alleged bodies of 'non-human beings' shown in Mexican Congress

The Vostochny cosmodrome: symbol of Moscow's struggling space sector

NASA joins the still controversial search for UFOs

NASA releases UFO report and says more science and less stigma are needed to understand them

Teams watch weather as OSIRIS-REx prepares to return asteroid sample

This September, after traveling billions of miles through our solar system, NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft will cruise past Earth with an extraordinary delivery. As it passes, it will release a mini-fridge size capsule containing a sample of primordial space rock collected from an asteroid located between the orbits of Earth and Mars.
OSIRIS-REx—the Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, and Security–Regolith Explorer—is the first U.S. mission to collect a sample from an asteroid. Scientists hope the pristine material it collected from asteroid Bennu in 2020—about half a pound of rubble and dust from the asteroid's surface—will provide a window into 4.5 billion years ago when the sun and planets were forming.
Before it can do that, the sample's protective capsule will withstand temperatures twice as hot as lava, and the second-fastest velocity ever achieved by a human-made object entering Earth's atmosphere.
After entering Earth's atmosphere at around 36 times the speed of sound, the capsule may eventually encounter wind, rain, and other weather conditions as it drops closer to the surface. Regardless of weather, it will land in the Great Salt Lake Desert, an arid landscape known for its scorching summer temperatures and its salt flats, the remnants of an ancient lakebed where crusty salt deposits coat the ground.