
Copernical Team
The search for life on Mars expands to studying its moons

A pair of researchers at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) has published a perspective piece in the journal Science outlining the efforts being conducted this decade to find out if Mars once hosted life. In their article, Ryuki Hyodo and Tomohiro Usui outline the three main efforts that are involved in looking for evidence of life on Mars over the next ten years, and explain why they and others at JAXA believe the best chance of finding evidence of life on Mars lies on one or both of its moons.
As Hyodo and Usui note, NASA is currently conducting a study of the Jezero Crater on the surface of Mars with its Perseverance rover.
Amyloid fibrils experiment operating aboard International Space Station

A novel experiment aimed at studying the mechanics of amyloid fibrils—a type of protein aggregation associated with diseases like diabetes, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's—started today aboard the International Space Station (ISS), led by a team at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
The project was designed by Amir Hirsa, a professor of mechanical, aerospace, and nuclear engineering at Rensselaer and member of the Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies (CBIS). He was looking for a way to study fluid dynamics without interference from the solid walls of a container, which would typically be necessary to hold a fluid being studied on Earth.
The concept, which Hirsa calls a ring-sheared drop, requires a microgravity environment, like the one found in orbit, where surface tension alone can hold a drop of liquid together. This will allow researchers to observe the effects of stress on protein—in this case: insulin.
"We're trying to understand this particular form of protein aggregation," Hirsa said. "And we're trying to remove the complication of wall nucleation."
The ring-sheared drop hardware—built by NASA and its contractors, and inspired by Hirsa's concept—includes a syringe that dispenses a large drop of liquid made up of water and dissolved insulin.
Watch Vega launch live

Tune in to ESA Web TV from 02:37 BST / 03:37 CEST on 17 August to watch the Vega launch live.
Best of both worlds-combining classical and quantum systems to meet supercomputing demands

Boeing to remove Starliner from rocket, months-long delay expected

Business growth scheme open to next group of space entrepreneurs

Traces of Ceres' icy crust found at Occator Crater

On chaos, drunks and a solution to the chaotic three-body problem

NASA, Boeing to Move Starliner to Production Facility for Propulsion System Evaluation

DART Gets Its Wings: Spacecraft Integrated with Innovative Solar Array Technology and Camera
