
Copernical Team
Keysight launches phased array antenna control and calibration solution

Bursts of star formation explain mysterious brightness at cosmic dawn

Light rocks on deck, gray rocks in the hole: Sols 3966-3697

A prehistoric cosmic airburst preceded the advent of agriculture in the Levant

Orbit Fab appoints Chief Engineer, advances refueling system test capabilities

New center will lay groundwork for better space weather forecasts

Firefly Aerospace completes Blue Ghost Lunar Lander Structure

Massive low earth orbit communications satellites could disrupt astronomy

SpaceX aims for its 50th Space Coast launch this year

SpaceX is targeting its 50th Space Coast launch of the year with another Starlink mission from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
A Falcon 9 carrying 22 of the company's Starlink satellites is slated for liftoff from Canaveral's Space Launch Complex 40 at 10:45 p.m. with four backup opportunities from 11:38 p.m. until 1:57 a.m. overnight and six backup opportunities late Thursday from 10:29 p.m. until 1:49 a.m. early Friday.
Space Launch Delta 45's weather squadron forecasts a 50% chance for good conditions with 70% chance in event of a 24-hour delay.
The booster on this flight is making its eighth flight and will attempt a recovery landing on the droneship Just Read the Instructions in the Atlantic Ocean.
This would be SpaceX's 70th orbital launch of the year across all of its launch pads in Florida and California. It's the 40th from Cape Canaveral with the other 10 Space Coast launches coming from Kennedy Space Center.
SpaceX will have managed 50 of the 53 total Space Coast launches this year with two so far from United Launch Alliance and one from Relativity Space making up the rest.
Space needs better 'parking spots' to stay usable, and an engineer is finding them

Any mission headed to space needs a "parking spot" at its destination. But these parking spots, regions located on orbits, are quickly becoming occupied or more vulnerable to collisions.
Most objects launching to space are satellites, which can travel faster than 4 miles per second in the regions where they park. About 10 times the number of satellites currently in space are expected to launch by 2030. Simultaneously, satellite constellations are increasing in number and size. These are groups of satellites working together as a system, such as for enabling GPS, observation of Earth, internet access and other types of communications.