
Copernical Team
ESA DG talks about the future of human space exploration

ESAWebTV caught up with the DG while he was in Florida for the Crew-4 launch. Here’s what he had to say.
SpaceX launches 4 astronauts for NASA after private flight

SpaceX launched four astronauts to the International Space Station for NASA on Wednesday, less than two days after completing a flight chartered by millionaires.
It's the first NASA crew comprised equally of men and women, including the first Black woman making a long-term spaceflight, Jessica Watkins.
"This is one of the most diversified, I think, crews that we've had in a really, really long time," NASA's space operations mission chief Kathy Lueders said on the eve of launch.
Liftoff of Crew-4 to the International Space Station

The Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon capsule carrying ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti and NASA astronauts Kjell Lindgren, Robert “Bob” Hines and Jessica Watkins to the International Space Station lifts off from Launchpad 39A.
Collectively known as Crew-4, the four astronauts were launched at 08:52 BST/09:52 CEST Wednesday 27 April from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida USA. Transit to the Station is expected to take under 24 hours.
Samantha is the third ESA astronaut to travel to the orbital outpost in a Crew Dragon. During the journey she and Jessica will serve as mission specialists. Kjell is Crew-4
Watch live: Crew-4 docking to the International Space Station

Follow the live coverage as the SpaceX Crew Dragon docks on the International Space Station, marking the beginning of ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti’s Minerva mission.
Scientists model landscape formation on Titan, revealing an Earth-like alien world

Xi Focus: Invigorating China's space exploration dream

SpaceX launches its latest crew to ISS for NASA

Solar beats nuclear at many potential settlement sites on Mars

The high efficiency, light weight and flexibility of the latest solar cell technology means photovoltaics could provide all the power needed for an extended mission to Mars, or even a permanent settlement there, according to a new analysis by scientists at the University of California, Berkeley.
Most scientists and engineers who've thought about the logistics of living on the surface of the Red Planet have assumed that nuclear power is the best alternative, in large part because of its reliability and 24/7 operation. In the past decade, miniaturized Kilopower nuclear fission reactors have advanced to the point where NASA considers them to be a safe, efficient and plentiful source of energy and key to future robotic and human exploration.
UAE vows 'responsible' artificial intelligence rollout

NASA selects investigation teams to join Geospace Dynamics Mission
