
Copernical Team
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 08:00
ESA’s Boost! fosters new launch and in-orbit services

Companies with small satellites are set to benefit from a new end-to-end space transportation service offering additional in-orbit flexibility proposed by D-Orbit and supported through ESA’s Boost! programme.
Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 08:18
Satellites for 5G to connect delivery vans seamlessly

A vehicle that remains continuously connected even when in remote areas is being road tested in Cornwall in the south west of the UK.
Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 06:07
China's five-star red flag flies proudly on red planet
Lanzhou, China (XNA) Jul 20, 2021
Four photos of Mars taken by the Tianwen 1 probe were unveiled in China last month, but the excitement generated by humanity's next great step in space exploration was shared around the world.
Just as eye-catching as images of the Martian surface itself was the Chinese national flag on the Zhurong rover's landing platform.
After the historic landing on May 15, the flag was slowly unr

Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 06:07
Funding partnerships launch the UK-Australia Space Bridge
London, UK (SPX) Jul 20, 2021
The first collaborative activity within the UK-Australia Space Bridge framework is being launched today by Australia's SmartSat CRC, UK Science and Innovation Network, and the Satellite Applications Catapult with the support of Austrade and the Australian Space Agency.
The Satellite Applications Catapult, based at the Harwell Space Cluster in Oxfordshire, and Australia's Smartsat CRC will

Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 06:07
Cosmic rays help supernovae explosions pack a bigger punch
London, UK (SPX) Jul 20, 2021
The final stage of cataclysmic explosions of dying massive stars, called supernovae, could pack an up to six times bigger punch on the surrounding interstellar gas with the help of cosmic rays, according to a new study led by researchers at the University of Oxford. The work will be presented by PhD student Francisco Rodriguez Montero today (19 July) at the virtual National Astronomy Meeting (NA

Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 06:07
A bug's life: Millimeter-tall mountains on neutron stars
London, UK (SPX) Jul 20, 2021
New models of neutron stars show that their tallest mountains may be only fractions of millimetres high, due to the huge gravity on the ultra-dense objects. The research is presented today at the National Astronomy Meeting 2021.
Neutron stars are some of the densest objects in the Universe: they weigh about as much as the Sun, yet measure only around 10km across, similar in size to a large

Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 06:07
New sunspot catalogue to improve space weather predictions
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Jul 20, 2021
Scientists from the University of Graz, Kanzelhohe Observatory, Skoltech, and the World Data Center SILSO at the Royal Observatory of Belgium, have presented the Catalogue of Hemispheric Sunspot Numbers. It will enable more accurate predictions of the solar cycle and space weather, which can affect human-made infrastructure both on Earth and in orbit. The study came out in the Astronomy and Astr

Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 06:07
Supermassive black holes put a brake on stellar births
London, UK (SPX) Jul 20, 2021
Black holes with masses equivalent to millions of suns do put a brake on the birth of new stars, say astronomers. Using machine learning and three state of the art simulations to back up results from a large sky survey, the researchers resolve a 20-year long debate on the formation of stars. Joanna Piotrowska, a PhD student at the University of Cambridge, will present the new work today (Tuesday

Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 06:07
SwRI to adapt mass spectrometer for Lunar missions
San Antonio TX (SPX) Jul 20, 2021
NASA has funded Southwest Research Institute's Environmental Analysis of the Bounded Lunar Exosphere (ENABLE) project, which aims to return mass spectrometry to the lunar surface. The three-year, $2.18 million program seeks to adapt a commercial off-the-shelf mass spectrometer into a design to identify materials present on the Moon.
Mass spectrometry is an analytic technique that identifie

Published in
News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 20 July 2021 06:07
Amazon magnate Bezos ready to ride his own rocket to space
Washington (AFP) July 20, 2021
The wealthiest man on the planet Jeff Bezos will ride his own rocket to outer space on Tuesday, a key moment for a fledgling industry seeking to make the final frontier accessible to elite tourists.
Blue Origin has planned its first crewed mission, an 11-minute hop from west Texas to beyond the Karman line and back again, to coincide with the 52nd anniversary of the first Moon landing.
V

Published in
News
Tagged under