
Copernical Team
Canada to send rover to Moon by 2026: minister

Canada will land a robotic rover on the Moon within five years, its industry minister said Wednesday, announcing that Ottawa plans to "dream big" as it advances its competitive stake in the growing global space market.
"Canada will be part of space history," Francois-Philippe Champagne told a news conference.
"We recognize that global interest in space and in the space industry is on the rise," he said. "As the whole world looks to the stars we are ready to make Canada a world leader in research, technology and innovation so that we can be there as well."
"Let's seize the moment. I don't think there's ever been a better time to be Canadian, and dream big."
The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) will partner with the United States' NASA on the mission, according to a statement.
Two Canadian companies will first be selected to develop concepts for the rover and science instruments for the mission.
Study reveals new details on what happened in the first microsecond of Big Bang

Thirty year stellar survey cracks mysteries of galaxy's giant planets

Deep oceans dissolve the rocky shell of water-ice planets

Lockheed and GM team up for Lunar rovers for Artemis program

Republic of Korea signs onto Artemis Accords for lunar exploration

NASA software unlocks Martian rover productivity

Honeybee Robotics and mPower Technology chosen to design Lunar charging station

Virgin Galactic completes first human spaceflight from Spaceport America, New Mexico

Experiments validate the possibility of helium rain inside Jupiter and Saturn
