
Copernical Team
General Atomics Partners with Lockheed Martin for Next-Gen Missile Tracking Satellites

Antaris and SpeQtral Unveil Quantum Encryption Satellite Collaboration

Space-Born Muscle Monitoring Technology Promises Earthly Healthcare Advancements

Hanwha Phasor introduces next-gen satellite antenna for enhanced global communication

Unveiling hydrogen's role in life's early energy mechanisms

Venus' Clouds Could Harbor Life: MIT Study Finds Amino Acids Stable in Sulfuric Acid

Earth from Space: Southeast Kenya

Russia's space agency aborts launch of 3 astronauts to the International Space Station; all are safe

Japan's space agency says it hopes to forge a profitable launch business with its new H3 rocket

Japan's space agency and its prime contractor said Thursday they hope to be able to forge a profitable launch business with their new H3 rocket after its first successful flight last month in an increasingly competitive market dominated by Space X.
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries have been developing the H3 as a successor to the soon-to-retire current mainstay H-2A, which enjoyed a 98% success rate but its high launch cost made it less competitive in the global market.
The Mars science helicopter could be an airborne geologist on Mars

After more than 70 successful flights, a broken rotor ended the remarkable and groundbreaking Ingenuity helicopter mission on Mars. Now, NASA is considering how a larger, more capable helicopter could be an airborne geologist on the Red Planet. For the past several years scientists and engineers have been working on the concept, proposing a six-rotor hexacopter that would be about the size of the Perseverance rover.
Called the Mars Science Helicopter (MSH), it would not only serve as an aerial scout for a future rover, but more importantly, it could also carry up to 5 kg (11 lbs) of science instruments aloft in the thin Martian atmosphere and land in terrain that a rover can't reach.
A new paper presented at the March 2024 Lunar and Planetary Science Conference outlines the geology work that such a helicopter could accomplish.
The paper, "Unraveling the Origin and Petrology of the Martian Crust with a Helicopter," notes there are several outstanding questions about the makeup and history of Mars' surface, especially with recent discoveries of unexpected dichotomies in the composition of basaltic rocks.