China readies Chang-e 7 for Lunar South Pole mission in search of water ice
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
China's Chang'e 7 mission is on track for a 2026 launch, with its sights set on the moon's southern polar region. The goal, China Media Group reported Monday, is to identify water ice deposits and trial breakthrough technologies crucial for extended human operations on the lunar surface.
According to the report, the probe features a new hopper module equipped with a water molecule analyzer New Martian Crater Reveals Far-Reaching Seismic Signals
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
By leveraging artificial intelligence, researchers have identified a newly formed crater on Mars, revealing that the impact event propelled vibrations deep into the planet's mantle.
Recent findings show that meteoroid impacts on Mars generate seismic waves that penetrate farther into the planet's interior than once believed. Two new studies illustrate this by matching quake data from NASA' KAIST develops AI-driven performance prediction model to advance space electric propulsion technology
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
Hall thrusters, an essential propulsion technology for space missions such as NASA's Psyche asteroid mission and SpaceX's Starlink satellites, operate using plasma to achieve efficient thrust. The research team at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) has developed an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered Hall thruster for CubeSats. This thruster will be integrated into t Europa Clipper Charts Course to Jupiter With First Stellar Snapshots
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
Three months after lifting off from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the Europa Clipper spacecraft still has 1.6 billion miles (2.6 billion kilometers) ahead before it settles into Jupiter's orbit in 2030. On arrival, it will capture detailed views of Europa's icy terrain. In the meantime, a pair of specialized cameras called star trackers is busy photographing deep space to confirm the c Quantum hardware reveals cosmic bubble shifts
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
Physicists have carried out an advanced simulation that they believe exposes fresh details about an elusive occurrence, potentially shaping the Universe's eventual destiny. The research centers on a concept called false vacuum decay, a scenario in which our Universe's apparent stability might be only temporary.
Originally proposed in quantum field theory around five decades ago, the idea s Interaction of kinetic waves and suprathermal particles could be key to unlocking heliophysics mystery
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
A graduate research assistant at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), a part of The University of Alabama system, has published a paper in the journal Astronomy and Physics that builds on an earlier study to help understand why the solar corona is so hot compared to the surface of the sun itself.
To shed further light on this age-old mystery, Syed Ayaz, a Ph.D. candidate in the U NASA Pioneers Autonomous Tools for Satellite Swarms
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
Coordinate your actions, unify your approach, and collaborate to fulfill a shared objective. This "pep talk" succinctly captures how NASA's latest swarm-based breakthrough operates. Known as Distributed Spacecraft Autonomy (DSA), it allows each satellite to make decisions independently while uniting with fellow spacecraft to pursue collective goals, all free from human oversight.
Within NA EUSPA unveils integrated GNSS and secure SATCOM user technology update
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
The European Union Agency for the Space Programme (EUSPA) has released the very first GNSS and Secure SATCOM User Technology Report, offering a unified resource that addresses two central space-based capabilities.
This new publication builds upon earlier GNSS User Technology and Secure SATCOM Market and User Technology studies, presenting an extensive review of the most recent innovations Zohar rides with SpaceX to enhance real time space weather coverage
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 11:02
Mission Space is preparing to make a major stride forward by sending its new Zohar space weather sensor payload into orbit aboard SpaceX's Transporter-13. This launch marks a significant milestone, as the sensor is designed to deliver continuous readings on solar activity, radiation levels, and magnetospheric variations in real time.
Zohar is placed and managed in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) by Artist's view of Europe's launcher family from 2024 onwards
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 07:00
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Artist's view of Europe's launcher family from 2024 onwards Scientists spot tiny Sun jets driving fast and slow solar wind
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 07:00
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Back in 2023, we reported on Solar Orbiter’s discovery of tiny jets near the Sun’s south pole that could be powering the solar wind. The team behind this research has now used even more data from the European Space Agency’s prolific solar mission to confirm that these jets exist all over dark patches in the Sun’s atmosphere, and that they really are a source of not only fast but also slow solar wind.
The newfound jets can be seen in this sped-up video as hair-like wisps that flash very briefly, for example within the circled regions of the
ESA and Finland pave the way towards a supersite for Earth observation
Tuesday, 04 February 2025 14:00
Today, ESA, the Finnish government and the Finnish Meteorological Institute took the initial steps towards establishing a ‘supersite’ for Earth observation calibration and validation in Sodankylä in Finnish Lapland.
Envisaged as a joint investment, this world-class site would bring benefits to both ESA, by helping to further ensure satellites deliver accurate data over high latitude environments, and to Finland by providing Finnish businesses with new opportunities to develop and test environmental sensors and technology.
ESA’s Gaia finds a mysterious planet and brown dwarf
Tuesday, 04 February 2025 13:00
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Using data from the European Space Agency’s Gaia mission, scientists have found a huge exoplanet and a brown dwarf. This is the first time a planet has been uniquely discovered by Gaia’s ability to sense the gravitational tug or ‘wobble’ the planet induces on a star. Both the planet and brown dwarf are orbiting low-mass stars, a scenario thought to be extremely rare.
Meteor collision shakes Mars recorded by InSight
Tuesday, 04 February 2025 10:37
A space rock crashed into the martian surface in February 2021, generating seismic waves that extended 1640 km to reach NASA's InSight lander. The collision carved out a crater about 21 m wide and disturbed roughly 1400 m. ESA's ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), through its Colour and Stereo Surface Imaging System (CaSSIS), captured the explosive moment.
Marsquakes, the martian counterparts 
