FAA: New tool limits disruptions caused by space operations
Friday, 09 July 2021 07:04
Earth from Space: Gulf of Martaban
Friday, 09 July 2021 07:00
The Gulf of Martaban, an arm of the Andaman Sea located in southern Myanmar, is featured in this false-colour image captured by the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission.
Virgin Galactic, Blue Origin face off in space tourism market
Friday, 09 July 2021 06:18
Final frontier: Billionaires Branson and Bezos bound for space
Friday, 09 July 2021 06:18
Space, the final frontier for billionaire Richard Branson
Friday, 09 July 2021 06:18
New clues to why there's so little antimatter in the universe
Friday, 09 July 2021 02:13
Thousands of galaxies classified in a blink of an eye
Friday, 09 July 2021 02:13
Homemade spacesuits ensure safety of Chinese astronauts in space
Friday, 09 July 2021 02:13
Exercise bike in space helps keep crew fit
Friday, 09 July 2021 02:13
NASA orders satellite container and trolley from RUAG Space
Friday, 09 July 2021 02:13
A touch of sun heats up material scieces at ESTEC
Friday, 09 July 2021 02:13
Mechanical arm is Chinese astronauts' space helper
Friday, 09 July 2021 02:13
Chinese Scientists Suggest Launching Dozens of Rockets to Prevent Asteroid Collision With Earth
Friday, 09 July 2021 02:13
FAA begins use of system to reduce impact of launches on airspace
Thursday, 08 July 2021 20:45
WASHINGTON — The Federal Aviation Administration has started to use a new tool intended to better integrate commercial launches and reentries into the National Airspace System, reducing the disruptions those events have on aviation.
The FAA announced July 8 that it formally started use of the Space Data Integrator (SDI) with the June 30 launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 from Cape Canaveral on the Transporter-2 rideshare mission.
Meet the open-source software powering NASA's Ingenuity Mars Helicopter
Thursday, 08 July 2021 19:27
When NASA's Ingenuity Mars Helicopter hovered above the Red Planet April 19 on its maiden voyage, the moment was hailed as the first instance of powered, controlled flight on another planet. Figuring out how to fly on Mars, where the air is thin but gravity is about a third of that on Earth, took years of work. Along with the challenge of developing a craft that was up to the task, the mission needed software to make the unprecedented flights possible.