Outpost raises $7M seed round to develop reusable satellites for Earth return service
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
Accenture invests in hyperspectral satellite company Pixxel to monitor Earth's health
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
MAVEN and EMM make first observations of patchy proton aurora at Mars
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
A vast and mysterious valley system in the southern Martian highlands
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
MIT's MOXIE experiment reliably produces oxygen on Mars
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
An Unexpected Stop during Sols 3580-3581
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
A Whole New World - Sols 3578-3579
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
Chang'e-5 reveals an intermediate stage in space weathering process of lunar soils
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
Solar satellite breaks ground with new data
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
Plant growth in China's space lab in good condition
Thursday, 01 September 2022 19:08
Video: 'Fuel to Mars' study heads to moon
Thursday, 01 September 2022 18:28
A Duke research study is preparing to blast off to the Moon with NASA on Artemis I.
Dr. Tim Hammond, professor of medicine at Duke, and co-investigator Dr. Holly Birdsall created the "Fuel to Mars" study to identify genes and gene pathways that fuel-producing algae use to survive deep space. A duplicate control experiment is housed at the Durham VA hospital to see how the algae grow without exposure to radiation and microgravity.
Their findings could help pave the way for future human space explorers.
The Artemis I, which has been delayed once already, is scheduled to blast off Saturday.
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First exoplanet image from James Webb Space Telescope revealed
Thursday, 01 September 2022 16:22
This team of amateurs built a satellite that NASA is taking to space
Thursday, 01 September 2022 16:10
If NASA is to boldly go where no man has gone before, the federal agency might have Tampa to thank for it.
NASA is set to launch the unmanned Artemis 1, the first flight of its larger Artemis program mission to build a moon base and send astronauts to Mars.
Such accomplishments will require affordable and reliable deep space communication. That's where Tampa comes in.
A team of mostly amateurs from around the country—but based out of Tampa—built a CubeSat, which is a miniature, cubed-shaped satellite used in space exploration in recent years.
The size of two loaves of bread side by side, their solar-powered CubeSat will hitch a ride on Artemis 1, get dropped off short of the moon and then propel itself as far as 28 million miles farther. All the while, their CubeSat will transmit information back to Earth.
"It's pretty unbelievable," said Wesley Falor, head of the group known as Team Miles.
Space Force building ground station in Alaska ahead of launch of Arctic satcom mission
Thursday, 01 September 2022 16:02
The U.S. Space Force broke ground on a new site at Clear Space Force Station, Alaska, will be the main gateway to the EPS-R payloads that will launch in 2023
The post Space Force building ground station in Alaska ahead of launch of Arctic satcom mission appeared first on SpaceNews.
Startups Scout and Privateer to collaborate on space-tracking technologies
Thursday, 01 September 2022 16:00
Space startups Privateer and Scout are "looking into how we can best combine our capabilities."
The post Startups Scout and Privateer to collaborate on space-tracking technologies appeared first on SpaceNews.