
Copernical Team
Spain's MIURA 1 launch campaign kicks off

Large mound structures on Kuiper belt object Arrokoth may have common origin

Lunar ambitions boost space funding as investment set to reach $33 billion by 2032

SwRI scientists use Webb, Sofia telescopes to observe metallic asteroid

US slaps Satellite TV provider with first-ever space debris fine

China invites Chang'e-8 lunar probe mission global collaboration

Space needs better 'parking spots' to stay usable

Study quantifies satellite brightness, challenges ground-based astronomy

US slaps TV provider with first-ever space debris fine

US authorities said they have issued a "breakthrough" first-ever fine over space debris, slapping a $150,000 penalty on a TV company that failed to properly dispose of a satellite.
On Monday the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) came down on Dish for "failure to properly deorbit" a satellite called EchoStar-7, in orbit since 2002.
"This marks a first in space debris enforcement by the Commission, which has stepped up its satellite policy efforts," the FCC, which authorizes space-based telecom services, said in a statement.
As the geostationary satellite came to the end of its operational life, Dish had moved it to an altitude lower than the two parties had agreed on, where it "could pose orbital debris concerns," the FCC said.
Estonia's next satellite, largely built by undergrad students, to fly aboard Vega VV23

Estonia's next satellite will fly aboard Europe's Vega VV23 launcher later this week. While largely designed and built by undergraduate students, the shoebox-sized ESTCube-2 has ambitious goals in mind, including surveys of Estonian vegetation and the first successful in-orbit demonstration of "plasma brake" technology.