Wi-Fi on planes boosted by satellite constellation
Thursday, 18 March 2021 10:00Flight passengers will soon be able to connect to their families and colleagues on Earth via low-orbit telecommunications satellites.
Earth from Space: Amazon rainforest
Thursday, 18 March 2021 09:00Ahead of the International Day of Forests, the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission takes us over part of the Amazon rainforest in the Amazonas – the largest state in Brazil.
NASA completes engine test firing of moon rocket on 2nd try
Thursday, 18 March 2021 07:56NASA completed an engine test firing of its moon rocket Thursday, after the first attempt in January ended prematurely.
NASA, SpaceX Sign Joint Spaceflight Safety Agreement
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04NASA and SpaceX have signed a joint agreement to formalize both parties' strong interest in the sharing of information to maintain and improve space safety. This agreement enables a deeper level of coordination, cooperation, and data sharing, and defines the arrangement, responsibilities, and procedures for flight safety coordination. The focus of the agreement is on conjunction avoidance
Successful test for NASA's giant Moon rocket
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04NASA successfully carried out a key static test of its troubled Space Launch System rocket on Thursday, a win for the agency as it prepares to return to the Moon. The second "hot fire" test saw all four of the rocket's RS-25 engines fire simultaneously at 4:40 pm Eastern time (2040 GMT) for the full duration of eight minutes, producing a maximum of 1.6 million pounds of thrust (7.1 million n
Reports: Biden to tap Bill Nelson as NASA administrator
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04
President Joe Biden is expected to nominate former Sen. Bill Nelson, who once spent several days in space, to lead NASA, people familiar with the matter confirmed Thursday.
Multiple unnamed sources told The Washington Post, Politico and The Verge that Biden will likely make the announcement by Friday.
They added that the White House also was considering former NASA astronaut and re
Peraton awarded US Army hypersonic testing and evaluation contract
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04Peraton has been awarded a U.S. Army contract for Hypersonic Test Engineering, Mission Planning and Systems (HyTEMPS), valued at up to $44 million over two years. This award builds upon Peraton's more than 10 years of experience supporting the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command (USASMDC) Technical Center and its mission to develop hypersonic vehicle technologies and provide hypers
New Chinese satellite measures solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04Solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) is emitted during plant photosynthesis. SIF results from vegetation chlorophyll giving off red and infrared light wavelengths when excited by solar radiation. Measuring SIF is important because it is closely related to the terrestrial gross primary productivity (GPP), which calculates the total amount of carbon dioxide fixed through photosynthesis in
'Warfighter Council' Guides Capability Development for Space Development Agency
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04As the Space Development Agency builds out the National Defense Space Architecture, it looks to a biannual "warfighter council" to provide guidance about what is actually important to those who will use the systems, the agency's director said today. "We want to make sure that we address our customers," Derek Tournear said. "The customers, in this case, are the combatant commanders."
Department of Defense Awards Relativity Space New Responsive Launch Contract
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04Relativity Space has been awarded its first orbital launch contract with the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), facilitated by the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU). This contract was awarded as a Space and Missile Systems Center (SMC) Launch Enterprise follow-up effort to the DoD Space Test Program (STP) Rapid Agile Launch Initiative (RALI) to identify capable commercial solutions for low-cost
Lockheed Martin well-positioned to capitalize on key technologies with Aerojet Rocketdyne acquisition
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04Following the news that Aerojet Rocketdyne's shareholders have voted to approve the Lockheed Martin acquisition; Anthony Endresen, Aerospace and Defense Associate Analyst at GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company, offers his view on what this deal will mean for Lockheed Martin: "If Lockheed Martin's acquisition of Aerojet Rocketdyne is successful, the company will be well-p
AFRL exchange officer leads international space collaboration
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04Air Force Research Laboratory exchange officer to the United Kingdom Capt. Jacob Singleton, plays an important role in promoting international cooperation in military research, development and acquisition among the United Kingdom (UK), United States and other North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries. Through the Department of Defense Engineer and Scientist Exchange program, Singleton h
Mapping Liberia's ecosystems to understand their value
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04Conservation scientist Trond Larsen and his team trekked through a remote forest in Liberia, recording the plants, animals, and insects that they saw. They noted whether the forest was intact or degraded. Far above their heads, NASA's Earth-observing satellites collected data about the terrain as the satellites continued their well-travelled orbits over Africa. The data collected by the te
Ancient leaves preserved under a mile of Greenland's ice
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04In 1963, inside a covert U.S. military base in northern Greenland, a team of scientists began drilling down through the Greenland ice sheet. Piece by piece, they extracted an ice core 4 inches across and nearly a mile long. At the very end, they pulled up something else - 12 feet of frozen soil. The ice told a story of Earth's climate history. The frozen soil was examined, set aside and th
The world's oldest crater from a meteorite isn't an impact crater after all
Thursday, 18 March 2021 06:04Several years after scientists discovered what was considered the oldest crater a meteorite made on the planet, another team found it's actually the result of normal geological processes. During fieldwork at the Archean Maniitsoq structure in Greenland, an international team of scientists led by the University of Waterloo's Chris Yakymchuk found the features of this region are inconsistent