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SpaceX performs Starship static-fire test

Thursday, 09 February 2023 21:11
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Starship static fire test

SpaceX fired nearly all of the engines in the booster of its Starship launch vehicle in a ground test Feb.

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In a keynote speech at the Federal Aviation Administration Commercial Space Transportation Conference, Kelly highlighted the accomplishments of the U.S.

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Tesat-Spacecom artist rendering of optical communications in space.

By requiring suppliers of laser terminals to comply with a common set of standards, the U.S.

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“There’s a handful of programs that we won that we would not have been able to win by ourselves and Boeing wouldn’t have been able to win by themselves,” said Millennium CEO Jason Kim.

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A Russian satellite has broken into pieces, littering debris in space
Space junk orbiting around earth - Conceptual of pollution around our planet. Credit: NASA - http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/

A Russian KOSMOS 2499 satellite broke up last month—for a second time—according to the Space Force's 18th Space Defense Squadron. In a recent tweet, the Space Force said they are currently tracking 85 individual pieces of debris at an altitude of 1,169 km (726 miles). The breakup occurred on January 4, 2023, but the reason for the disintegration remains unknown.

At this , it will take decades for the debris to deorbit and burn up in the Earth's atmosphere. The debris is located in an increasingly busy region in Earth's orbit.

#18SDS has confirmed the breakup of COSMOS 2499 (#39765, 2014-028E)—occurred Jan 4, 2023 at appx 0357 UTC. Tracking 85 associated pieces at est 1169 km altitude—analysis ongoing. #spacedebris#space@SpaceTrackOrg@US_SpaceCom@ussfspoc

— 18th Space Defense Squadron (@18thSDS) February 7, 2023

But this is actually the second breakup event of Kosmos 2499.

Sound test of Hera asteroid mission antenna

Thursday, 09 February 2023 17:35
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Sound test of Hera asteroid mission antenna Image: Sound test of Hera asteroid mission antenna
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AI tools can be used to develop space wargaming tools. Credit: True Anomaly

Space companies are finding new ways to exploit artificial intelligence for commercial and national security operations, executives said Feb.

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Lithuania-based NanoAvionics said it has doubled its small satellite production space to meet the needs of constellation operators.

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More lunar missions means more space junk around the Moon—two astronomers are building a catalog to track the trash
There are more than 100 missions to the Moon planned in the coming years, including the next Artemis missions. Credit: NASA

Scientists and government agencies have been worried about the space junk surrounding Earth for decades. But humanity's starry ambitions are farther reaching than the space just around Earth. Ever since the 1960s with the launch of the Apollo program and the emergence of the space race between the U.S. and Soviet Union, people have been leaving trash around the moon, too.

Today, experts estimate that there are a few dozen pieces of like spent rocket bodies, defunct satellites and mission-related orbiting in cislunar —the space between Earth and the and the area around the moon. While this isn't yet a large amount of junk, astronomers have very little information about where these pieces of are, let alone what they are and how they got there.

Juice’s odyssey of exploration

Thursday, 09 February 2023 13:25
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Three-minute cinematic video trailer presenting ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (Juice) mission Video: 00:03:21 Three-minute cinematic video trailer presenting ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (Juice) mission
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Digital cities

One of Europe's Galileo satellites has been reconfigured to emit a new signal component optimised to serve low-end receiver devices and Internet of Things applications. 

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Gerroa, Australia (SPX) Feb 09, 2023
SpaceDaily.com, a pioneer in the field of technology and science news for over 25 years, has announced the launch of a new AI/ML-centric Content Management System (CMS) that will take its newsroom operations to the next level. Building upon decades of automation process development, this innovative platform represents the future of SpaceDaily.com, leveraging the latest Large Language Model (LLM) software technology to enhance its news editorial and production capabilities.
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Washington DC (UPI) Feb 8, 2021
SpaceX will embark on a monumental step toward launching Starship on Thursday when it test-fires all 33 of its first-stage boosters. President Gwynne Shotwell shared a modest goal for the day, stating that not blowing up the launch pad would be considered a success. She was a keynote speaker at the Federal Aviation Administration's Annual Commercial Space Transportation Conference in Wa
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Washington DC (UPI) Feb 9, 2021
Russia successfully launched a Soyuz rocket from Kazakhstan on Thursday with a final destination of the International Space Station where it will deliver some 3 tons of supplies on the weekend. The three-stage Soyuz-2 rocket launched as scheduled at 1:15 a.m. EST from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. It was late morning in Baikonur when liftoff occurred, and the rocket soared through sun

Vulcan: Rocket stacked for inaugural launch

Thursday, 09 February 2023 07:58
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Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Feb 09, 2023
Embarking on a bold new era to broaden affordable access to space, the inaugural United Launch Alliance (ULA) Vulcan rocket now stands assembled at its Florida launch site for pre-flight testing. ULA technicians successfully stacked the all-American rocket atop the Vulcan Launch Platform (VLP) in the Vertical Integration Facility (VIF) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in preparation f
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