SmallSat Alliance recognizes collegiate prize winners
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 23:02Astra seeks strategic investors as cash reserves decrease
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 21:32NRO to select providers of new forms of optical satellite imagery
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 20:08NASA's Europa probe gets a hotline to Earth
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 19:25NASA's Europa Clipper is designed to seek out conditions suitable for life on an ice-covered moon of Jupiter. On Aug. 14, the spacecraft received a piece of hardware central to that quest: the massive dish-shaped high-gain antenna.
Stretching 10 feet (3 meters) across the spacecraft's body, the high-gain antenna is the largest and most prominent of a suite of antennas on Europa Clipper. The spacecraft will need it as it investigates the ice-cloaked moon that it's named after, Europa, some 444 million miles (715 million kilometers) from Earth. A major mission goal is to learn more about the moon's subsurface ocean, which might harbor a habitable environment.
Once the spacecraft reaches Jupiter, the antenna's radio beam will be narrowly directed toward Earth. Creating that narrow, concentrated beam is what high-gain antennas are all about.
La NASA invita a los medios al lanzamiento de Psyche
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 17:45NASA Invites Media to Psyche Launch, Mission will Study an Asteroid
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 17:23U.S. deactivates GSSAP surveillance satellite, two new ones in the works
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 17:03Download the 2023 Small Satellite Conference Dailies Wrap up
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 13:49Download the 2023 Small Satellite Conference Dailies Wrap-up
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 13:49Could puncturing a satellite's battery help it deorbit faster?
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 13:30A few years ago, there was a panic about lithium-ion batteries that exploded and could do things like take down a jetliner. On a recent trip, an airline asked passengers to turn in any devices with batteries that had been banned because of safety concerns. These are indicators of a widely understood downside of lithium-ion batteries, ubiquitous in cell phones, laptops, and other electronic hardware—they can easily catch fire very spectacularly. However, a team at the Aerospace Company is working on an idea to turn this potentially catastrophic event into an asset—by using it to deorbit defunct satellites.
Almost all satellites have some form of battery backup in them. Many utilize it to keep the lights on, while its solar panels aren't catching enough rays to fully power the craft. And most of those batteries are some form of lithium-ion, so the industry already widely adopted the underlying technology.
Rocket Lab to launch pair of NASA Earth science cubesats
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 10:35NASA selected Rocket Lab to launch a pair of cubesats in 2024 to monitor energy entering and exiting the polar regions of the planet.
Astronomers confirm Maisie's galaxy is among earliest ever observed
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 09:47Thanks to the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers racing to find some of the earliest galaxies ever glimpsed have now confirmed that a galaxy first detected last summer is in fact among the earliest ever found. The findings are in the journal Nature. Follow-up observations since first detection of Maisie's galaxy have revealed that it is from 390 million years after the Big Bang. Altho
Dark energy could be measured by studying the galaxy next door
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 09:47Researchers have found a new way to measure dark energy - the mysterious force that makes up more than two-thirds of the universe and is responsible for its accelerating expansion - in our own cosmic backyard. The researchers, from the University of Cambridge, found that it may be possible to detect and measure dark energy by studying Andromeda, our galactic next-door neighbour that is on
LeoLabs provides tracking support for ESA's historic assisted satellite reentry
Tuesday, 15 August 2023 09:47LeoLabs, the leading commercial provider of Space Traffic Management (STM) and Space Situational Awareness (SSA) services, today shared their support for the European Space Agency's (ESA) successful assisted reentry of Aeolus, an Earth observation satellite, over Antarctica on 28 July 2023. This assisted reentry was considered the "first-of-its-kind" because the satellite, named Aeolus, wa