
Copernical Team
Trimble's new agriculture displays provide next-generation performance and connectivity for in-field operations

SIMBA Chain awarded SpaceWERX Orbital Prime Contract

Impact that killed the dinosaurs triggered "mega-earthquake" that lasted weeks to months

Northrop Grumman-built commercial telecommunications satellites launched successfully

Intelsat announces successful launch of Galaxy 33 and Galaxy 34 satellites

Cables, tie-wraps and no step

JPL's Venus Aerial Robotic Balloon Prototype Aces Test Flights

Mengtian space lab fueled ahead of upcoming launch

China sends two satellites into space via offshore rocket launch

The moon is the perfect spot for humanity's offsite backup

In a recent study, a collaborative team of researchers discuss the potential for future lunar settlers to establish a backup data storage system of human activity in the event of a global catastrophe on Earth that could be used to recover human civilization on a post-catastrophe planet. This comes as NASA's Artemis missions plan to send people back to the moon for the first time since 1972, coupled with current global events such as the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and the War in Ukraine, with Russian President Vladimir Putin recently threatening nuclear war. Given the current state of world affairs, how important is it to establish a type of off-world data backup?
"The COVID-19 pandemic taught us how vulnerable our world is to large-scale disasters because of its growing interconnectivity," says Carson Ezell, who is an undergraduate at Harvard University, the Director of Space Futures Initiative, and lead author on the study.