
Copernical Team
Ingenuity's 40th flight on Mars tracks a rocky road

Star visibility eroding rapidly as night sky gets brighter: study

Light pollution is growing rapidly and in some places the number of stars visible to the naked eye in the night sky is being reduced by more than half in less than 20 years, according to a study released Thursday.
The researchers, whose findings were published in the journal Science, said the increase in light pollution —skyglow—that they found was much larger than that measured by satellite observations of Earth at night.
For the study of the change in global sky brightness from artificial light, the researchers used stellar observations from 2011 to 2022 submitted by more than 51,000 "citizen scientists" around the world.
Exotic water ice contributes to understanding of magnetic anomalies on Neptune and Uranus

From Europe to Jupiter via Kourou

Airbus finalises JUICE ready for its mission to Jupiter

Sols 3718-3720: Go For Drilling at Encanto

Astronauts conduct first ISS spacewalk of 2023

Chinese astronauts send Spring Festival greetings from space station

Galileo tribute unveiled as Juice says 'Farewell, Europe'

NASA's Lucy Mission Suspending Further Solar Array Deployment Activities
