
Copernical Team
Space Team Europe for Ariane 6: Michel Bonnet

They say it takes a village to raise a child. To launch a rocket, we have the combined expertise and passion of Space Team Europe. Michel Bonnet is one of many making the first Ariane 6 launch possible, and has been interviewed as part of a series highlighting some of the people that make up this dream team.
“Who has not dreamed of working in the space sector?” he says, recalling how he built small rockets as a teenager using sodium chlorate, sulphur and sugar. In 1995, after years of work with helicopters and nuclear submarines, Michel started
Lunar I-Hab mock-up all set

A mock-up of ESA’s habitation module on the upcoming lunar Gateway space station is now ready for testing at Thales Alenia Space in Turin, marking a step forward in bringing humans back to the Moon.
Simulating tumbling reaction wheel reentry

A reaction wheel – one of the heaviest parts of a space mission, its changing rotation used to shift a satellite’s orientation – seen in a plasma wind tunnel belonging to the High Enthalpy Flow Diagnostics Group (HEFDiG) at the University of Stuttgart Institute of Space Systems (IRS). Arc-heated gas in the test chamber reaches speeds of several kilometres per second, reproducing reentry conditions, while the reaction wheel itself is being rotated, reproducing the tumbling that takes place as a satellite plunges through the atmosphere.
The reaction wheel itself comes from Collins Aerospace in Germany, which has supported Design for Demise (D4D) activities
Blowtorch effect of satellite reentry

From Miles Above, Satellite Data Helps Spot Hazardous Trees and Reduce Wildfire Risk

RTX's Raytheon completes critical milestone for VIIRS program

Tata Advanced Systems and Satellogic announce successful launch of TSAT-1A satellite

Quectel Launches New BG95-S5 Satellite Communication Module for IoT

SkyFi and Enabled Intelligence unite to advance geospatial intelligence with AI-driven satellite imagery
