
Copernical Team
American Astronomical Society Supports Astro2020 Decadal Survey

CADRE of Mini Rovers Navigate Simulated Lunar Terrain

BT secures industry first Global Partnership with OneWeb

Judge tosses Blue Origin's lawsuit over SpaceX lunar contract

iRocket And Turion Space ink agreement for 10 launches to low earth orbit

Your ticket to space, with ‘Space Station Earth’

European dates for the ‘Space Station Earth’ immersive concert tour, have been announced this week.
Earth from Space: Shetland Islands

The Shetland Islands, an archipelago in the Northern Isles of Scotland, are featured in this Copernicus Sentinel-2 image.
Melt – ESA’s newly released documentary

Melt – ESA’s newly released documentary
Glaciers across the globe have lost over nine trillion tonnes of ice in half a century. How will glaciers look over the coming decades?
A CADRE of mini-rovers navigates the lunar terrain of SLOPE

NASA's Cooperative Autonomous Distributed Robotic Exploration (CADRE) project is developing small robots programmed to work autonomously as a team to explore the lunar surface.
A team of shoebox-size rover scouts was recently put to the test at a NASA Glenn Research Center lab. The facility, called the Simulated Lunar Operations lab (or SLOPE) is designed to mimic lunar and planetary surface operations. The mini-rovers traversed simulated lunar soil—called regolith—to better understand the types of challenges that lunar rovers of this size will face on the Moon's surface. The results of the tests will be used to characterize small rover performance and improve the rovers' mobility design.
NASA to deflect asteroid in test of 'planetary defense'

In the 1998 Hollywood blockbuster "Armageddon," Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck race to save the Earth from being pulverized by an asteroid.
While the Earth faces no such immediate danger, NASA plans to crash a spacecraft traveling at a speed of 15,000 miles per hour (24,000 kph) into an asteroid next year in a test of "planetary defense."
The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) is to determine whether this is an effective way to deflect the course of an asteroid should one threaten the Earth in the future.
NASA provided details of the DART mission, which carries a price tag of $330 million, in a briefing for reporters on Thursday.
"Although there isn't a currently known asteroid that's on an impact course with the Earth, we do know that there is a large population of near-Earth asteroids out there," said Lindley Johnson, NASA's Planetary Defense Officer.