
Copernical Team
Lab Findings Suggest Some Indicators of Life on Exoplanets May Be Misleading

Dark Matter May Experience Forces Beyond Gravity

DECam Study Reveals Dense Galactic Clusters Around Early Universe Quasars

Astronomers catch a glimpse of a uniquely inflated and asymmetric exoplanet

Nuclear strategies tested at Sandia could avert asteroid disaster

A Striped Surprise

New Glenn second stage completes successful hotfire test ahead of November launch

China launches eight satellites using Smart Dragon 3 rocket

Draco mission made for destruction

Over the nearly 70 years of spaceflight, about 10 000 intact satellites and rocket bodies have reentered the atmosphere with many more to follow. Yet for such a ubiquitous event, we still lack a clear view on what actually happens to a satellite during its fiery last moments.
ESA is preparing the Destructive Reentry Assessment Container Object (Draco) mission that will collect unique measurements during an actual reentry and breakup of a satellite from the inside. A capsule especially designed to survive the destruction will transmit the valuable telemetry shortly after.
2 record-breaking Russians and an American who lived on space station for 6 months return to Earth
