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Copernical Team

Laser research to boost deep space missions
Associate Francis Bennet will lead one of two new ANU projects to help propel deep space missions. Photo: Lannon Harley/ANU

Canberra is one step closer to being Australia's home to deep space laser communication, thanks to a government funding for researchers at The Australian National University (ANU).

Two ANU projects have received funding from The Australian Moon to Mars Demonstrator Feasibility Grants from the Australian Space Agency to help test new activities that will drive exploration.

The first project will build a prototype deep space communications transmitter compatible with optical communication technology developed by NASA for missions including the Optical to Orion (O2O) demonstration, at a specialist facility in the ACT.

The facility could eventually be used by NASA to support deep space missions.

"This funding is going to allow us to build a prototype system compatible with future NASA missions which are going to deep space," project lead, ANU Associate Professor Francis Bennet, said.

Berkeley CA (SPX) Jul 21, 2021
More than 700 imaging satellites are orbiting the earth, and every day they beam vast oceans of information - including data that reflects climate change, health and poverty - to databases on the ground. There's just one problem: While the geospatial data could help researchers and policymakers address critical challenges, only those with considerable wealth and expertise can access it. No
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 22, 2021
The Missile Defense Agency-developed Joint Track Management Capability (JTMC) and Open Systems Gateway (OSG) linked multiple sensor and fire control systems from multiple services into one integrated network during a July 15 flight test at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico. The integration led to the successful engagement of a cruise missile target by an Army Patriot Advanced Capabilit
Milton Keynes UK (SPX) Jul 23, 2021
A dust storm that engulfed the entire Red Planet in 2018 destroyed a vortex of cold air around the Martian south pole and brought an early spring to the hemisphere. By contrast, the storm caused only minor distortions to the polar vortex in the northern hemisphere and no dramatic seasonal changes. Dr Paul Streeter of The Open University's Faculty of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathemati
Friday, 23 July 2021 11:37

Meet the Martian meteorite hunters

London UK (SPX) Jul 23, 2021
A team at the Natural History Museum (NHM), London is paving the way for future rovers to search for meteorites on Mars. The scientists are using the NHM's extensive meteorite collection to test the spectral instruments destined for the ExoMars rover Rosalind Franklin, and develop tools to identify meteorites on the surface of the red planet. The project is being presented today (23 July) at the
Washington DC (UPI) Jul 22, 2021
Astronomers have for the first time imaged a moon-forming disk around an exoplanet. Scientists expect the discovery - made using the Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimeter Array and detailed Thursday in the journal Astrophysical Journal Letters - to aid the study of planet and moon formation in young solar systems. "Our work presents a clear detection of a disc in which satelli
Moscow (AFP) July 22, 2021
The Avangard, the Kinzhal and now the Zircon - Russia is leading the race to develop a range of new hypersonic weapons that President Vladimir Putin has dubbed "invincible". Moscow's latest step came this week with another successful test of the Zircon, a ship-launched hypersonic missile. Fired from one of Russia's most powerful warships, the Admiral Gorshkov frigate, a Zircon travellin
Friday, 23 July 2021 11:00

Counting carbon

Video: 00:03:40

The Paris Agreement adopted a target for global warming not to exceed 1.5°C. This sets a limit on the additional carbon we can add to the atmosphere – the carbon budget. Only around 17% of the carbon budget is now left. That is about 10 years at current emission rates.

Each country reports its annual greenhouse gas emissions to the United Nations. Scientists then set these emissions against estimates of the carbon absorbed by Earth’s natural carbon sinks. This is known as the bottom-up approach to calculating the carbon budget.

Another way to track carbon sources and sinks is

Friday, 23 July 2021 11:30

Week in images: 19 - 23 July 2021

Fuelling the Eutelsat Quantum satellite

Week in images: 19 - 23 July 2021

Discover our week through the lens

Friday, 23 July 2021 11:41

Duneside view of ESA's technical heart

Duneside view of ESA's technical heart Image: Duneside view of ESA's technical heart
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