
Copernical Team
A sanitizer in the galactic centre region

My Favorite Martian Image: 'Enchanted' Rocks at Jezero Crater

SES's C-band satellite launched onboard SpaceX Falcon 9

Rocket Lab's Lunar Photon completes 3rd orbit raising maneuver for CAPSTONE Moon mission

Successful high-speed flight experiments with new sounding rocket configuration

Historic Mars mission completes all preset tasks

Bernese researchers simulate defense of the Earth

Falling stardust, wobbly jets explain blinking gamma ray bursts

Webb telescope: NASA to reveal deepest image ever taken of universe

NASA administrator Bill Nelson said Wednesday the agency will reveal the "deepest image of our universe that has ever been taken" on July 12, thanks to the newly operational James Webb Space Telescope.
"If you think about that, this is farther than humanity has ever looked before," Nelson said during a press briefing at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, the operations center for the $10 billion observatory that was launched in December last year and is now orbiting the Sun a million miles (1.5 million kilometers) away from Earth.
NASA mission aims to study ice and water on the moon's surface

In the fall of 2023, a U.S. rover will land at the south pole of the moon. Its mission: to explore the water ice that scientists know lurks within the lunar shadows, and which they believe could help sustain humans who may one day explore the moon or use it as a launching pad for more distant space exploration.
NASA recently selected Kevin Lewis, an associate professor in the Krieger School's Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences who has also worked on missions on Mars, as a co-investigator of the mission. Using part of the rover's navigational system, he plans to explore the moon's subsurface geology from his office in Olin Hall.
"I have been on other rover missions, but on Mars, so I'm a little bit new to the moon," Lewis said. "We're going to see into shadows that have never seen the sun, let alone been seen by humans. So it could be a very different type of surface than we've seen in other photos of the surface of the moon."
Drier than a desert