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When the Wells Run Dry: Al-Mawasi's Displaced Face a Crisis Measured in Drops

A significant drop in per capita water availability has turned daily survival in Gaza’s al-Mawasi camp into a five-hour ordeal of queues, jerrycans, and contaminated saltwater that families have no choice but to drink. The crisis sharpened after Eta, a company that had provided clean water to displaced Palestinians across the Gaza Strip, ceased operations […]

The post When the Wells Run Dry: Al-Mawasi’s Displaced Face a Crisis Measured in Drops appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who laugh loudest in groups are often running the most sophisticated emotional surveillance in the room

The loudest laugher in any room isn't just performing joy — they're often running a continuous, sophisticated emotional monitoring system, reading every face, cataloging every shift, and paying a cognitive price nobody around them sees.

The post The people who laugh loudest in groups are often running the most sophisticated emotional surveillance in the room appeared first on Space Daily.

How the European Space Agency became the quiet power behind most of humanity's Earth observation infrastructure

While the United States and China dominate space policy headlines, the European Space Agency has quietly constructed the world's most consequential Earth observation architecture — and the political, industrial, and data-access decisions that made this possible reveal a model of institutional power that Washington has struggled to replicate.

The post How the European Space Agency became the quiet power behind most of humanity’s Earth observation infrastructure appeared first on Space Daily.

Graphene and lasers for space propulsion

Tuesday, 07 April 2026 09:00
Video: 00:00:05

An international research team boarded ESA’s 86th parabolic flight campaign in May 2025 with ultralight graphene aerogels, then hit them with light during zero gravity phases to observe their reaction under space-like conditions.  

Inside a vacuum chamber, a continuous laser beamed on three small cubes made of graphene aerogel. A high-speed camera recorded the action through glass tubes. This video has been slowed down 10 times; each experiment run lasted 30 milliseconds. 

The effect of the laser during the microgravity phases was startling: the graphene samples shot forward instantly. Another finding was the ability to control the propulsion by tuning the light beam. The stronger the laser,

From York to Glover: What Two Centuries of Erased Exploration Tell Us About Who We Send Into the Unknown

Victor Glover became the first Black astronaut to orbit the Moon this week, a milestone that draws a direct line through more than two centuries of American exploration, back to an enslaved man named York who never received credit for helping chart the western frontier. Glover, serving as pilot aboard NASA’s Artemis II mission, flew […]

The post From York to Glover: What Two Centuries of Erased Exploration Tell Us About Who We Send Into the Unknown appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who always volunteer to go first aren't brave. They just can't tolerate the anticipation of waiting.

Volunteering to go first is often misread as confidence. In reality, it's frequently a nervous system strategy for escaping anticipatory anxiety, which research consistently shows is more distressing than the feared event itself.

The post The people who always volunteer to go first aren’t brave. They just can’t tolerate the anticipation of waiting. appeared first on Space Daily.

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Galileo goes to the Moon

Tuesday, 07 April 2026 07:45
Blue Ghost lander on the Moon’s surface

Last year, history was made as a navigation receiver on the Moon determined its position in real time using signals from approximately 410 000 km away. The receiver, called the Lunar GNSS Receiver Experiment (LuGRE), acquired signals from four navigation satellites orbiting Earth: two Galileo satellites and two GPS satellites.

The mission also tested Galileo’s Emergency Warning Satellite Service (EWSS) on the Moon, demonstrating the robustness and reach of the planned service.

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Australia's Highest-Decorated Soldier Faces Five War Crimes Murder Charges Over Afghan Civilian Killings

Ben Roberts-Smith, Australia’s most decorated living war veteran, faces five counts of war crimes murder related to the killing of unarmed Afghan civilians. The charges mark the first time a recipient of the Victoria Cross — Australia’s highest military honour — has been criminally prosecuted for conduct in a war zone. But the significance of […]

The post Australia’s Highest-Decorated Soldier Faces Five War Crimes Murder Charges Over Afghan Civilian Killings appeared first on Space Daily.

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From Picosats to Defense Contracts: How a Spanish Startup Is Betting Its Future on Japan's Security Market

A Spanish satellite startup that once built spacecraft for under $30,000 is now chasing defense contracts in Tokyo, betting that a rapid transition from tiny experimental satellites to larger, more capable platforms can open doors to government customers hungry for sovereign space capabilities. FOSSA Systems has reportedly partnered with Japanese trading firm Kanematsu and opened […]

The post From Picosats to Defense Contracts: How a Spanish Startup Is Betting Its Future on Japan’s Security Market appeared first on Space Daily.

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