NASA mirrors on ESA pathfinder to enhance lunar navigation
Friday, 08 July 2022 12:23
NASA will supply the upcoming European Space Agency (ESA) Lunar Pathfinder satellite with an array of laser retroreflectors, mirrored devices that reflect light back at its source. The retroreflectors will validate navigation capabilities that will be critical to the Artemis missions and future lunar exploration.
Week in images: 04-08 July 2022
Friday, 08 July 2022 12:10
Week in images: 04-08 July 2022
Discover our week through the lens
A four-stroke engine for atoms
Friday, 08 July 2022 10:53
NASA's CAPSTONE Pulls Off First Targeting Maneuver on Journey to the Moon
Friday, 08 July 2022 10:53
SwRI-led study provides new insights about surface, structure of asteroid Bennu
Friday, 08 July 2022 10:53
SpaceX ties record for reused Falcon 9 rocket on 50th Starlink launch
Friday, 08 July 2022 10:53
CAPSTONE deploys from Rocket Lab Lunar Photon into Lunar Transfer Orbit
Friday, 08 July 2022 10:53
Meet NASA's Orion Spacecraft
Friday, 08 July 2022 10:53
Shenzhou-14 Taikonauts conduct in-orbit science experiments, prepare for space walks
Friday, 08 July 2022 10:53
SwRI demonstrates machine learning tool to efficiently process complex solar data
Friday, 08 July 2022 10:53
Vega-C: watch the launch
Friday, 08 July 2022 08:00
ESA’s new Vega-C rocket is nearly ready for its 13 July inaugural flight. You can follow live on ESA Web TV - EN or IT
Flight VV21 will now lift off as soon as 14:13 CEST, pending suitable conditions for launch.
Broadcast is now live - EN or IT
14:13 CEST/13:13 BST/12:13 UTC/09:13 Kourou – liftoff
Vega-C: watch the launch 13 July
Friday, 08 July 2022 08:00
ESA’s new medium-lift Vega-C rocket is nearly ready for its inaugural flight. You can follow live on ESA Web TV. Flight VV21 will lift off as soon as 13 July at 13:13 CEST, pending suitable conditions for launch.
Broadcast begins 12:45 CEST/11:45 BST on ESA Web TV
13:13 CEST/12:13 BST – liftoff
Using lasers and 'tow-trucks', Japanese firms target space debris
Friday, 08 July 2022 07:46
From laser beams and wooden satellites to galactic tow-truck services, start-ups in Japan are trying to imagine ways to deal with a growing environmental problem: space debris.
Junk like used satellites, parts of rockets and wreckage from collisions has been piling up since the space age began, with the problem accelerating in recent decades.
"We're entering an era when many satellites will be launched one after another. Space will become more and more crowded," said Miki Ito, general manager at Astroscale, a company dedicated to "space sustainability".
"There are simulations suggesting space won't be usable if we go on like this," she told AFP. "So we must improve the celestial environment before it's too late."
The European Space Agency (ESA) estimates that around one million pieces of debris larger than a centimeter—big enough to "disable a spacecraft"—are in Earth's orbit.
Earth from Space: Fuerteventura and Lanzarote
Friday, 08 July 2022 07:00
Fuerteventura and Lanzarote, part of the Canary Islands lying in the North Atlantic Ocean, are featured in this false-colour image captured by the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission.