
Copernical Team
Launching robots into lunar caves

A hundred meters below the surface of the moon lie caves untouched by humans. They were discovered about ten years ago, but space agencies want to send robots to investigate these mysterious cavities before astronauts venture in. "On the moon's surface, the temperature is 150 degrees above zero during the day and 150 degrees below zero at night," says Lucas Froissart, who recently completed a Master's degree in mechanical engineering at EPFL. "In these subterranean caves, which can be reached through natural, vertical pits, the temperature is -30 degrees and there's no radiation. Since the climate is constant and tolerable for human beings, these tunnels could conceivably serve as base camps."
Round robots
During his Master's program, Froissart landed an internship at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). Because of the pandemic, however, he couldn't go to Tokyo. He ended up doing his internship work in Professor Auke Ijspeert's lab, collaborating with his Japanese colleagues by video conference.
NOAA's GOES-T reaches geostationary orbit, now designated GOES-18

MDA retires space tracking and surveillance system after 12 years, thousands of missions

Millennium Space Systems shipped GEO Wide Field of View for launch

GMV guarantees PAZ satellite services

Fifth asteroid ever discovered before impact

NASA says Mark Vande Hei will return from ISS on Russian spacecraft

Scientists, undergraduates team up to protect astronauts from radiation

New space funding paves the way for pioneering approaches to energy, communication and resources

Astra announces multi-launch contract and first launch with Spaceflight Inc.
