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Copernical Team
AFRL Commander moderates Future Of Propulsion Panel At AFA Air, Space, Cyber Conference
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Rocket Lab to launch environmental monitoring satellite for General Atomics
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US flies Russian cosmonaut to ISS as Ukraine conflict rages
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Successful TEXUS 57 Launch - the weightless world above the Arctic Circle
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Earth from Space: Bouches-du-Rhône
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![Bouches-du-Rhône, France](https://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/images/2022/10/bouches-du-rhone_france/24502939-1-eng-GB/Bouches-du-Rhone_France_card_full.jpg)
The port town of Fos-Sur-Mer, in the southern part of Bouches-du-Rhône, France, is featured in this image captured by Copernicus Sentinel-2. It is from here where the first Meteosat Third Generation Imager satellite set sail last week on its journey to Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana.
SpaceX delivers Russian, Native American women to station
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![In this image from video made available by NASA, Russian Cosmonaut Anna Kikina enters the International Space Station from a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule on Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022. Kikina is the first Russian to launch from the U.S., in 20 years. Credit: NASA via AP SpaceX delivers Russian, Native American women to station](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2022/spacex-delivers-russia.jpg)
A Russian cosmonaut who caught a U.S. lift to the International Space Station arrived at her new home Thursday for a five-month stay, accompanied by a Japanese astronaut and two from NASA, including the first Native American woman in space.
The SpaceX capsule pulled up to the station a day after launching into orbit.
Australia seeks to grow plants on moon by 2025
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![Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain moon](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2022/moon.jpg)
Australian scientists are trying to grow plants on the moon by 2025 in a new mission unveiled Friday that they said could help pave the way for a future colony.
Plant biologist Brett Williams, from the Queensland University of Technology, said seeds would be carried by the Beresheet 2 spacecraft—a private Israeli moon mission.
They would be watered inside the sealed chamber after landing and monitored for signs of germination and growth.
Plants will be chosen based on how well they cope in extreme conditions, and how quickly they germinate, he said.
One likely choice is an Australian "resurrection grass" that can survive without water in a dormant state.
"The project is an early step towards growing plants for food, medicine and oxygen production, which are all crucial to establishing human life on the moon," the researchers said in a statement.
Caitlin Byrt, an Associate Professor from the Australian National University in Canberra, said the research was also relevant to food security fears driven by climate change.
"If you can create a system for growing plants on the moon, then you can create a system for growing food in some of the most challenging environments on Earth," Byrt said in a statement.
Cables, tie-wraps and no step!
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![Cables, tie-wraps and no step!](https://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/images/2022/10/cables_tie-wraps_and_no_step/24508758-1-eng-GB/Cables_tie-wraps_and_no_step_card_full.jpg)
NASA and SpaceX launch 4 more crew to the space station
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![Credit: CC0 Public Domain iss](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2018/iss.jpg)
The SpaceX taxi service from the Space Coast took flight again Wednesday with NASA's Crew-5 mission to the International Space Station.
The four-person crew from NASA, Japan and Russia hitched a ride in the Crew Dragon Endurance spacecraft atop a Falcon 9 rocket that lifted off from KSC's Launch Pad 39-A just after noon.
"That was a smooth ride," said Crew-5 commander and NASA astronaut Nicole Mann. "You've got three rookies that are pretty happy to be floating in space right now and one veteran astronaut who's pretty happy to be back as well."
Once again, SpaceX was able to recover its first-stage booster on recovery ship Just Read the Instructions in the Atlantic while the spacecraft made it to orbit.
Mann is joined by fellow NASA astronaut and pilot Josh Cassada and Roscosmos cosmonaut Anna Kikina—all three flying for the first time—plus Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Koichi Wakata, who is making his fifth trip to space having flown on several space shuttle missions and one Russian Soyuz spacecraft.
With roughly a 29-hour ride before arriving to the ISS, the crew could be seen clapping hands and throwing fist pumps as a plush Albert Einstein doll floated about the cabin.
Team develops new tools to help search for life in deep space
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![Counterclockwise from top: California’s Mono Lake was the site of a field test for JPL’s Ocean Worlds Life Surveyor. A suite of eight instruments designed to detect life in liquid samples from icy moons, OWLS can autonomously track lifelike movement in water flowing past its microscopes. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech Developing More Tools to Help Search for Life in Deep Space](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2022/developing-more-tools.jpg)
Are we alone in the universe? An answer to that age-old question has seemed tantalizingly within reach since the discovery of ice-encrusted moons in our solar system with potentially habitable subsurface oceans. But looking for evidence of life in a frigid sea hundreds of millions of miles away poses tremendous challenges.