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Copernical Team

Copernical Team

Saturday, 02 October 2021 07:05

Hello Mercury

Hello Mercury Image: Hello Mercury
Saturday, 02 October 2021 09:00

BepiColombo’s first views of Mercury

Mercury first impressions

The ESA/JAXA BepiColombo mission has captured its first views of its destination planet Mercury as it swooped past in a close gravity assist flyby last night.

'Mini psyches' give insights into mysterious metal-rich near-earth asteroids
An artist impression of a close flyby of the metal-rich near-Earth asteroid 1986 DA. Astronomers using the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility have confirmed that the asteroid is made of 85% metal. Credit: Addy Graham/University of Arizona

Metal-rich near-Earth asteroids, or NEAs, are rare, but their presence provides the intriguing possibility that iron, nickel and cobalt could someday be mined for use on Earth or in Space.

New research, published in the Planetary Science Journal, investigated two metal-rich asteroids in our own cosmic backyard to learn more about their origins, compositions and relationships with meteorites found on Earth.

These metal-rich NEAs were thought to be created when the cores of developing planets were catastrophically destroyed early in the solar system's history, but little more is known about them.

international space station
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

In an out of this world study, space archaeologists are reconstructing life on the International Space Station (ISS) over the past two decades, to better understand space culture and get an inside look at how astronauts interact with their tools and colleagues when above Earth.

The ability to understand the 'microsociety' of crews onboard the ISS will offer a window into how life in functions, as humans consider interplanetary exploration. So how is this gravity defying research made possible?

Internationally recognized space archaeologist, Associate Professor Alice Gorman at Flinders University, says ISS researchers won't be able to travel to the  themselves, instead opting to use millions of photographs taken onboard over nearly two decades, to document developments and changes within the station's lifestyle and cultural makeup.

"Fortunately for us, the first occupation of the ISS coincided with the emergence of digital photography," says Associate Professor Gorman.

"The images include metadata recording the time and date, which become an excavation, linking the contents of images to moments in time. Given that the crew takes approximately 400 photographs per day, images depicting the station interior now number in the millions.

OPS-SAT in orbit

Yesterday, ESA’s orbiting laboratory, OPS-SAT, hosted the first-ever stock trade in space. The successful experiment required developers at Europe’s leading online broker flatexDEGIRO to think far outside of the box and adapt their software to the technical demands and constrained bandwidth found on an orbiting platform at 500 km altitude.

Friday, 01 October 2021 11:40

La Palma lava flows into the sea

This image, captured by Copernicus Sentinel-2 on 30 September, shows the flow of lava from the volcano erupting on the Spanish island of La Palma. Image: This image, captured by Copernicus Sentinel-2 on 30 September, shows the flow of lava from the volcano erupting on the Spanish island of La Palma.
Friday, 01 October 2021 11:52

Navigating a very close approach

BepiColombo first Mercury flyby

Tonight, BepiColombo will perform the first of six Mercury flybys, each honing the spacecrafts’ trajectory with the ultimate goal of shedding enough energy – after its two years ‘falling’ towards the Sun – to be caught by the innermost planet’s gravity and remain in Mercurial orbit.

ESA expedition to the Gorner Glacier in Switzerland

Week in images: 27 September - 1 October 2021

Discover our week through the lens

Friday, 01 October 2021 13:18

Lorentz test chamber at Sunday's Open Day

Lorentz test chamber at Sunday's Open Day Image: Lorentz test chamber at Sunday's Open Day
OPS-SAT in orbit

Yesterday, ESA’s orbiting laboratory, OPS-SAT, hosted the first-ever stock trade in space. The successful experiment required developers at Europe’s leading online broker flatexDEGIRO to think far outside of the box and adapt their software to the technical demands and constrained bandwidth found on an orbiting platform at 500 km altitude.

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