
Copernical Team
'Tatooine-like' exoplanet spotted by ground-based telescope

The secret of Venus may be hidden in the heat of the night

Day of Discovery: 7 Earth-Size Planets

Rocky Road offers plenty of tasty science bites during Sols 3391-3394

The second-generation PRISMA Earth observation system gets underway

Monitoring Arctic permafrost with satellites, supercomputers, and deep learning

Whitepaper highlights ground segment's critical role in satellite connectivity

Scottish Space Sector Charts Path to a Sustainable Future

SpaceX to launch SpaceLogistics Mission Extension Pod for Optus satellite

NASA rocket team to chase pulsating aurora

A new NASA sounding rocket mission will soon take to the Alaskan skies. The LAMP mission, short for Loss through Auroral Microburst Pulsations, will fly above an often-overlooked kind of northern lights to test a theory on what causes them. The launch window at Poker Flat Research Range in Fairbanks, Alaska, opens on Feb. 24, 2022.
The aurora borealis, or northern lights, is a familiar treat to those who call northern latitudes home. Auroras come in different shapes and colors, waving their ribbons of vibrant green, red and purple across the sky. But one variety of aurora displays a peculiar behavior: it pulsates.