
Copernical Team
Chang'E-5 mission returned samples shed new light on our moon's surface makeup and geologic history

Chang'e-5 samples reveal how young volcanism occurred on the Moon

Ascent satellite marks end of mission objectives

Designing the trajectory of a microsatellite swarm from the macro-micro perspective

US Space Command to Transfer Space Object Tracking to Department of Commerce

ISRO launches 36 OneWeb satellites

China completes test of vacuum liquid oxygen-methane rocket engine

NASA to increase Artemis fleet, orders 3 more crew capsules

India launches 36 internet satellites delayed by Ukraine war

Partial solar eclipse from Iceland to India on Tuesday

A partial solar eclipse will be visible across a swathe of the Northern Hemisphere on Tuesday, with amateur astronomers warned to take care watching the rare phenomenon.
The eclipse will start at 0858 GMT in Iceland and end off the coast of India at 1302 GMT, crossing Europe, North Africa and the Middle East on its way, according to the IMCCE institute of France's Paris Observatory.
Solar eclipses occur when the Moon passes between the Sun and Earth, casting its shadow down onto our planet.
A total solar eclipse happens when the Moon completely blocks the Sun's disk, momentarily plunging a portion of the Earth into complete darkness.
However Tuesday's eclipse is only partial, and the "Moon's shadow will not touch the surface of the Earth at any point," the Paris Observatory said in a statement.