
Copernical Team
NanoAvionics aims for 30 percent US-market share for smallsats

SES Prices EUR 625 Million Hybrid Bond Offering

Study: Milky Way evolved slowly, peacefully, just like a lot of other galaxies

UK companies join forces to build revolutionary beam-hopping satellite

Merida Aerospace plans to begin rocket test launches in 2021

British spaceflight to become reality as government provides launchpad for spaceports

May's Full Moon comes with Supermoon Eclipse

Who's an astronaut as private spaceflight picks up speed?

As more companies start selling tickets to space, a question looms: Who gets to call themselves an astronaut?
It's already a complicated issue and about to get more so as the wealthy snap up spacecraft seats and even entire flights for themselves and their entourages.
Solar storms are back, threatening life as we know it on Earth

A few days ago, millions of tons of super-heated gas shot off from the surface of the sun and hurtled 90 million miles toward Earth.
The eruption, called a coronal mass ejection, wasn't particularly powerful on the space-weather scale, but when it hit the Earth's magnetic field it triggered the strongest geomagnetic storm seen for years. There wasn't much disruption this time—few people probably even knew it happened—but it served as a reminder the sun has woken from a yearslong slumber.
While invisible and harmless to anyone on the Earth's surface, the geomagnetic waves unleashed by solar storms can cripple power grids, jam radio communications, bathe airline crews in dangerous levels of radiation and knock critical satellites off kilter. The sun began a new 11-year cycle last year and as it reaches its peak in 2025 the specter of powerful space weather creating havoc for humans grows, threatening chaos in a world that has become ever more reliant on technology since the last big storms hit 17 years ago. A recent study suggested hardening the grid could lead to $27 billion worth of benefits to the U.S.
Cosmic 2-for-1: Total lunar eclipse combines with supermoon
