
Copernical Team
Iridium proposes a new model for monitored BVLOS UAS integration

ESA backs Greek firms' and universities' CubeSats

Continuing along the alternate route: Sols 3861-3864

Rover on the home stretch to the Martian moon Phobos

Long March 6 rocket carries experimental satellite to space

OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample will have new home in Houston

New form of electromagnetic launch will reduce orbital costs by 100-fold

Intelsat To sustainably extend life of four satellites by 2027

Even though they're bigger, Generation 2 Starlinks are fainter than Gen1

We've filed plenty of reports here at UT warning about the potential impact of Starlink and similar satellites on the field of astronomy. We've gone so far as to point out that the granddaddy of space-based telescopes—Hubble—has already had some of its images tarnished by passing Starlink satellites.
However, SpaceX has been aware of the problem and is working to limit their product's brightness. The recently launched Gen2 satellites seem to have made a significant step forward—research from a team of amateur astronomers finds that the new Gen2 Starlinks are more than 10x fainter than previous Gen1 iterations.
Admittedly, that finding comes with a lot of caveats. But the pedigree of the team doing the research isn't in question. It was led by Anthony Mallama, a senior engineer at Raytheon and an author of numerous technical papers and articles discussing Starlink's brightness. He and six other amateur astronomers collected their own data for this paper, recently released on the arXiv pre-print server.
A trio of images highlight BepiColombo’s third Mercury flyby

The ESA/JAXA BepiColombo mission has made its third of six gravity assist flybys at Mercury, snapping images of a newly named impact crater as well as tectonic and volcanic curiosities as it adjusts its trajectory for entering Mercury orbit in 2025.