NASA spacecraft around the moon photographs the crash site of a Japanese company's lunar lander
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Airbus says space business turnaround going well

Airbus executives say they are making good progress to turn around the company’s space business unit even as they consider combining it with those at two other European companies.
Astrology in the Space Age: How Our Birth Charts Might Evolve with Interplanetary Living
As we become multi-planetary as a species, with ambitious Mars colonizing and lunar settlement efforts already well underway, we must consider how this push into space will upset one of our most enduring interpretive systems: astrology. How Solar Energy Innovations from Space Technology Are Powering Earth's Future
Solar energy has long been a cornerstone of sustainable power solutions, but many don't realize how innovations originally developed for space technology are driving breakthroughs here on Earth. Companies like a href="https://www.smartsolarenergyco.com/">https://www.smartsolarenergyco.com/ /a> are leveraging these advanced technologies to develop smarter, more efficient solar energy systems tha China launches ChinaSat-9C geostationary communications satellite

ULA testing OpenAI’s government-compliant chatbot

'RocketGPT' among first deployments of government-compliant ChatGPT designed for sensitive aerospace data
Isaacman interested in privately funded science missions

Former NASA administrator nominee Jared Isaacman says he is interested in pursuing some of the goals he had for the agency from outside it.
Biomass satellite returns striking first images of forests and more
Today, at the Living Planet Symposium, ESA revealed the first stunning images from its groundbreaking Biomass satellite mission – marking a major leap forward in our ability to understand how Earth’s forests are changing and exactly how they contribute to the global carbon cycle. But these inaugural glimpses go beyond forests. Remarkably, the satellite is already showing potential to unlock new insights into some of Earth’s most extreme environments.
Lunar dust poses lower health risk than urban air pollution study shows
New research led by the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) reveals that lunar dust is considerably less toxic to human lung cells than typical Earth-based air pollution. This finding offers reassurance for NASA's Artemis missions, which aim to establish a sustained human presence on the moon.
The study, published in Life Sciences in Space Research, examined the effects of advanced lunar DLR and NASA expand Artemis partnership with enhanced lunar radiation detectors
DLR and NASA have signed a renewed agreement to strengthen their collaborative efforts in space medicine, with a particular emphasis on radiation research. The announcement came during the Paris Air Show on 16 June 2025, underscoring the growing need to understand and mitigate radiation risks for astronauts on deep space missions.
A central element of this partnership is the deployment of 