
Copernical Team
The Making of Juice – Episode 9

Webb detects extremely small main-belt asteroid

A previously unknown 100–200-metre asteroid — roughly the size of Rome’s Colosseum — has been detected by an international team of European astronomers using the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. Their project used data from the calibration of the Mid-InfraRed Instrument (MIRI), in which the team serendipitously detected an interloping asteroid. The object is likely the smallest observed to date by Webb and may be an example of an object measuring under 1 kilometer in length within the main asteroid belt, located between Mars and Jupiter. More observations are needed to better characterize this object’s nature and properties.
Orion blueprint

SpaceX delays Hispasat Amazonas Nexus launch

Physicists observe rare resonance in molecules for the first time

New ice is like a snapshot of liquid water

Ghostly mirrors for high-power lasers

Scientists track tropical landslide creeping below an African city

IBM and NASA collaborate to research impact of climate change with AI

AFRL partners with NASA in cubesat navigation, communication mission
