We're launching more than ever
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 09:00Space in response to COVID-19
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 08:00Do you have fresh ideas on how Earth observation data can contribute to monitoring the effects brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic? If so, ESA and the European Commission have launched a new series of monthly challenges asking for innovative solutions on how satellite data can be used to help better understand the effects of the coronavirus on society, economy and the environment.
Fly me to the Moon: Japan billionaire offers space seats
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19It's the sort of chance that comes along just once in a blue Moon: a Japanese billionaire is throwing open a private lunar expedition to eight people from around the world. Yusaku Maezawa, an online fashion tycoon, was announced in 2018 as the first man to book a spot aboard the lunar spaceship being developed by SpaceX. Maezawa, who paid an undisclosed sum for the trip expected to launc
Rocket Lab plans new Neutron rocket, intends to go public
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19California-based Rocket Lab, which has sent rockets into space 17 times using its small Electron vehicle, plans to launch a much bigger rocket called Neutron by 2024. As part of Rocket Lab's effort to raise funds for Neutron, it plans a public listing on the Nasdaq stock exchange by the end of June. Rocket Lab is confident it will succeed, but humble enough to adapt and offer new products
New design for Russian super-heavy methane-powered launch vehicle completed
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19The new design of a Russian carrier rocket powered by liquefied natural gas (methane) has been put together, a space industry source told Sputnik. "It is planned to create a super-heavy launch vehicle ... [with] six side blocks around the central one - all with the RD-182 engine [operating on methane], and the upper stage using the RD-0169 [engine]", the source said. The Russian SRC
Musk, Maezawa say moon mission is on track for 2023
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19SpaceX will fly its deep-space rocket Starship in orbit "many, many times before 2023" and will take 12 people around the moon that year, the company's founder and CEO Elon Musk announced on Tuesday. "It will be safe enough for human transport by 2023 - it's looking very promising," Musk said in a video announcement with Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa. Maezawa and Musk fles
Lockheed Martin And NEC Put AI To Work On Programs Like NASA's Artemis Mission
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19Lockheed Martin and NEC Corporation have signed a joint collaboration agreement to extend their partnership utilizing NEC's System Invariant Analysis Technology (SIAT). The companies are also finalizing a licensing agreement with a multi-year option. "The power of AI is leveraged across our entire enterprise, and with a trusted partner like NEC, we gain the resources to expand its abilitie
NASA, Navy test diving technology that could be used on the moon
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19The Navy teamed up with NASA astronauts and engineers last week to test a technology that allows divers to work more efficiently underwater and could be used the next time astronauts return to the moon. Divers from the Naval Sea Systems Command's Supervisor of Salvage and Diving joined the NASA team at the Sonny Carter Training Facility in Houston between Feb. 24 and 26 to test the Navy
Three elder sisters of the Sun with planets
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19An international team led by Prof. dr habil. Andrzej Niedzielski, an astronomer from the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun (Poland), has discovered yet another three extrasolar planets. These planets revolve around the stars that can be called elder sisters of our Sun. You can read about the astronomers' success in Astronomy and Astrophysics. The prestigious European journal will pub
Why the Sun's composition varies
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19About 17 years ago, J. Martin Laming, an astrophysicist at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, theorized why the chemical composition of the Sun's tenuous outermost layer differs from that lower down. His theory has recently been validated by combined observations of the Sun's magnetic waves from the Earth and from space. His most recent scientific journal article describes how these magne
Space hurricane observed for the first time
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19The first observations of a space hurricane have been revealed in Earth's upper atmosphere, confirming their existence and shedding new light on the relationship between planets and space. Hurricanes in the Earth's low atmosphere are known, but they had never before been detected in the upper atmosphere. An international team of scientists led by Shandong University in China analysed
Microsoft sets stage for mixed-reality future
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19Microsoft on Tuesday set the stage for a future in which long-distance coworkers can collaborate as though in the same room, using augmented reality glasses and cloud computing power. The US technology colossus launched Microsoft Mesh platform at its annual Ignite developers conference, which was a streamed event this year due to the pandemic. "One of the easiest ways to think about it i
A mission for Earth's future
Tuesday, 02 March 2021 07:19Understanding the changes happening to Earth and its delicate balance is of ever increasing importance. "With the Harmony mission, we have the opportunity to gain new insights into processes that take place within the Earth system. This represents a considerable scientific and technical challenge," says Alberto Moreira, Director of the German Aerospace Center Microwaves and Radar Institute.
KVH Industries posts buoyant revenues on jam-proof battlefield navigation demand
Monday, 01 March 2021 22:00TAMPA, Fla. — KVH Industries, the U.S. maritime satellite-connectivity specialist, expects clear sailing ahead after growing quarterly revenues despite shaky seas for cruise ships.
KVH said cost-containment measures, and strong sales of its TACNAV tactical navigation products to military customers increasingly worried about GPS resiliency, delivered one of its strongest fourth-quarter results from continuing operations in the past five years.
NGA warns U.S. lead in geospatial intelligence is being challenged
Monday, 01 March 2021 21:59WASHINGTON — The United States is in a “great power competition” and the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency is being challenged to provide faster and better products and services, the agency’s deputy director Stacey Dixon said March 2.