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Copernical Team
JAXA startup Tenchijin announces funding from JAXA
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AST SpaceMobile and NASA sign agreement to improve spaceflight safety
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Third US-Republic of Korea Civil Space Dialogue
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Space company Maxar plans to go private with $6.4 billion deal
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One ESA: now in six languages
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One ESA: now in six languages
The One ESA brochure explores ESA’s establishments and how they work together on European space missions. The brochure is printed in English and is available as a PDF and interactive format in five additional languages.
One year ago, a perfect launch for the James Webb Space Telescope
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The voice counted backwards in French from ten to one, then announced, “Décollage” – lift-off. The 15-year-long collaboration between NASA, ESA and the Canadian Space Agency had just entered its most critical phase: the launch itself. What happened next would determine whether the James Webb Space Telescope made it into space or not.
SpaceX launches 54 Starlink communication satellites
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Rocket Lab scrubs first U.S. Electron launch over high winds
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Space crew using robotic arm to inspect damaged capsule
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![Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain space](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2020/3-space.jpg)
The crew of the International Space Station on Sunday was inspecting an attached Russian space capsule that may have been damaged by a micrometeorite, while ground controllers considered whether to send up a replacement spaceship to ferry some of them home.
Russia's space corporation, Roscosmos, said the crew was using a camera on a Canadian-built robotic arm to capture images of the Soyuz MS-22 where a coolant leak was detected last Wednesday night, U.S. time. After the images are transmitted to the ground on Monday, space officials will analyze them—along with other data about the problem—by month's end and decide on next steps.
One option, Roscomos said, is to expedite the delivery of another Soyuz capsule to the space station. Workers at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan are preparing to launch Soyuz MS-23 to the space station next March with three crew members but could send it up sooner without a crew. That would allow some of the seven crew now on the space station to return home.
A Russian space official said last Thursday a micrometeorite could have caused the leak.
New study confirms the light from outside our galaxy brighter than expected
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