AI at the crossroads of cybersecurity, space and national security in the digital age
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 13:30Webb probes galaxy teeming with newborn stars
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 13:00![](/plugins/content/jlexcomment/assets/icon.png)
![](https://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/images/2024/04/m82_nircam_image_shorter_wavelengths/26007796-1-eng-GB/M82_NIRCam_image_shorter_wavelengths_card_full.jpg)
The NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has set its sights on the starburst galaxy Messier 82 (M82), a small but mighty environment that features rapid star formation. By looking closer with Webb’s sensitive infrared capabilities, a team of scientists is getting to the very core of the galaxy, gaining a better understanding of how it is forming stars and how this extreme activity is affecting the galaxy as a whole.
Saharan dust plume
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 12:40![](/plugins/content/jlexcomment/assets/icon.png)
![Images from the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission show a large dust storm originating from the Sahara Desert that has engulfed skies across the central Mediterranean Basin.](https://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/images/2024/04/saharan_dust_plume/26012083-1-eng-GB/Saharan_dust_plume_card_full.jpg)
ESA's solar eclipse maker, Proba-3
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 11:40![](/plugins/content/jlexcomment/assets/icon.png)
![Proba-3 Occulter and Coronagraph spacecraft](https://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/images/2024/04/proba-3_occulter_and_coronagraph_spacecraft/26009762-1-eng-GB/Proba-3_Occulter_and_Coronagraph_spacecraft_card_full.jpg)
Hundreds of millions of people will witness next week’s total solar eclipse across North America, and solar physicists from around the globe are flocking to join them. Eclipses offer a brief glimpse of the Sun’s ghostly surrounding atmosphere – the solar corona – normally kept invisible by the Sun’s sheer glare. But the corona will soon be opened up for more sustained study: today in Belgium ESA has unveiled the pair of spacecraft making up its new Proba-3 mission, planned to produce orbital solar eclipse events on demand.
Orbital Sidekick shares first-light imagery
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 11:00Group photo in front of the Ariane 6 core with French President
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 10:57![](/plugins/content/jlexcomment/assets/icon.png)
![](https://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/images/2024/04/group_photo_in_front_of_the_ariane_6_core_with_french_president/26011426-1-eng-GB/Group_photo_in_front_of_the_Ariane_6_core_with_French_President_card_full.jpg)
Teams from ESA, CNES, ArianeGroup and Arianespace working diligently to get the new European rocket Ariane 6 ready for launch pose for a photo with French President Emmanuel Macron who visited Europe's Spaceport on 26 March 2024. The President addressed the teams working on Ariane 6 in the launcher assembly building, with the rocket's upper stage and core stage that will soar into space soon in the background. Also present was Toni Tolker-Nielsen, ESA’s Director of Space Transportation, Philippe Baptiste CEO of France’s space agency CNES, Martin Sion CEO of ArianeGroup, Stéphane Israël CEO of Arianespace and François Ringuet,
China launches first of a new series of Yaogan reconnaissance satellites
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 10:40NASA wants to come up with a new clock for the moon, where seconds tick away faster
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 07:18![](/plugins/content/jlexcomment/assets/icon.png)
![The moon rises behind the Home Place clock tower in Prattville, Ala., Saturday, June 22, 2013. NASA wants to come up with an out-of-this-world way to keep track of time, putting the moon on its own souped-up clock. The White House on Tuesday, April 2, 2204, told NASA to work with other agencies abroad to come up with a new moon-centric time reference system. Credit: AP Photo/Dave Martin, File NASA wants to come up with a new clock for the moon, where seconds tick away faster](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2024/nasa-wants-to-come-up.jpg)
White House directs NASA to develop lunar time standard
Wednesday, 03 April 2024 00:52Latest satellite production delay sends AST SpaceMobile stock plummeting
Tuesday, 02 April 2024 21:16Pentagon unveils strategy to harness commercial space tech for national security
Tuesday, 02 April 2024 19:23Solar Orbiter prepared for 'worst-case scenario'
Tuesday, 02 April 2024 18:29![](/plugins/content/jlexcomment/assets/icon.png)
![Tracking sunspots up close. Credit: European Space Agency Solar Orbiter prepared for 'worst-case scenario'](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2024/solar-orbiter-prepared.jpg)
The ESA/NASA Solar Orbiter is approaching the closest point to the sun in its current orbit. It is an important time for the mission's science activities, and the mission control team at ESA is constantly preparing for any possible problems the spacecraft might face as it swoops past our active and unpredictable star.
Mission control to Solar Orbiter. Come in Solar Orbiter...
"It's our worst-case scenario," says flight controller Daniel Lakey. "If Solar Orbiter were to experience some major issue on board, and then we were unable to reestablish communications."
Solar Orbiter's close approach to the sun ("perihelion") is a period of peak scientific activity.
It requires flight control teams and flight dynamics experts at ESA's ESOC mission control center to carry out a series of highly complex operations.
If something goes wrong during these activities, the spacecraft could auto-reset itself into "safe mode."
In safe mode, the spacecraft's software restarts and only its most basic functions are reactivated. Teams on Earth then work out what triggered the safe mode, solve the issue, and restart more advanced systems like scientific instruments.
Not in the path of totality? You can still watch Monday's total solar eclipse online
Tuesday, 02 April 2024 17:20![](/plugins/content/jlexcomment/assets/icon.png)
![This combination of photos shows the path of the sun during a total eclipse by the moon Monday, Aug. 21, 2017, near Redmond, Ore. On April 8, 2024, spectators who aren't near the path of totality or who get cloudy weather on eclipse day can still catch the total solar eclipse, with NASA, science centers and media organizations planning to stream live coverage online from different locations along the path. Credit: AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File Not in the path of totality? You can still watch Monday's total solar eclipse online](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2024/not-in-the-path-of-tot.jpg)
Russia, China catching up to U.S. in space weaponry, new report finds
Tuesday, 02 April 2024 13:30Finishing touches for South Australia's first permanent spaceport ahead of Inaugural Launch
Tuesday, 02 April 2024 12:27![](/plugins/content/jlexcomment/assets/icon.png)
![](https://www.spxdaily.com/images-bg/southern-launch-whalers-way-map-south-australia-bg.jpg)