Submissions open for Copernicus Masters 2022
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 06:43
Submissions open for Copernicus Masters 2022
Maxar eager to launch new satellites amid soaring demand for imagery over Ukraine
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 01:00
As Maxar satellites continue to collect images of Russia’s attacks on Ukraine, the company is working with customers so it can allocate more capacity to meet U.S. government needs, CEO Daniel Jablonsky told SpaceNews.
Most distant galaxy candidate yet
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 00:05
NASA working around valve issue to complete testing of Artemis
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 00:05
L3Harris awarded $117M space object-tracking modernization contract
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 00:05
17-year Neptune study reveals surprising temperature changes
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 00:05
First-of-its-kind detection of reduced human CO2 emissions
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 00:05
Chinese satellite ground station receives Landsat-9 data
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 00:05
Moog opens spacecraft-integration facility
Monday, 11 April 2022 22:22
Moog Inc. is quadrupling the size of its Colorado space vehicle production facility as the New York-based company long known as a spacecraft component supplier expands its role as a space vehicle integrator.
The post Moog opens spacecraft-integration facility appeared first on SpaceNews.
Checking in on the cameras of NASA's asteroids-bound Lucy spacecraft
Monday, 11 April 2022 20:21
On Feb. 14, NASA's Lucy spacecraft, which is in the first few months of its journey to the Trojan asteroids, obtained a series of calibration images with its four visible-light cameras.
Download your ‘News from the 37th Space Symposium’ special digital edition
Monday, 11 April 2022 16:52
The SpaceNews editorial team produced four show dailies, a nightly email newsletter and all-day web coverage during the 37th Space Symposium in Colorado Springs the week of April 4.
We’ve compiled all our reporting into a special digital edition that's free.
Giant space telescopes could be made out of liquid
Monday, 11 April 2022 16:24
The Hubble space telescope has a primary mirror of 2.4 meters. The Nancy Grace Roman telescope also has a mirror measuring 2.4 meters, and the James Webb Space Telescope has a whopping 6.5 meter primary mirror. They get the job done that they were designed to do, but what if… we could have even bigger mirrors?
The larger the mirror, the more light is collected. This means that we can see farther back in time with bigger mirrors to observe star and galaxy formation, image exoplanets directly, and work out just what dark matter is.
But the process for creating a mirror is involved and takes time. There is casting the mirror blank to get the basic shape. Then you have to toughen the glass by heating and slow cooling. Grinding the glass down and polishing it into its perfect shape comes next followed by testing and coating the lens.
3D-printed bone for emergency medicine in space
Monday, 11 April 2022 15:23
This artificial bone sample is an early step towards making 3D bioprinting a practical tool for emergency medicine in space. An ESA R&D effort aims to develop bioprinting techniques capable of giving astronauts on an extended mission ready access to the "spare parts" needed for bone or skin grafts, and even complete internal organs.
3D bioprinting may soon be practical on Earth, and could help meet the challenging conditions of spaceflight. Astronauts in zero or low gravity lose bone density, for example, so fractures may be more likely in orbit or on Mars.
Or, treating a burn often involves a graft of skin taken from a patient's body—manageable on Earth with full hospital care but more risky in space, as the secondary damage may not heal easily.
Skin or bone can be bioprinted using a nutrient-rich "bio-ink" of human blood plasma, available from the astronauts themselves. By working upside down—in "minus 1g" gravity—the team has shown they can probably do it in space.
This bone sample is part of the first selection of items on the 99 Objects of ESA ESTEC website, a set of intriguing, often surprising artifacts helping tell the story of more than half a century of activity at ESA's technical heart.
How scientists analyzed the aerodynamic characteristics of the Tianwen-1 Mars parachute
Monday, 11 April 2022 15:20
Space National Guard put on indefinite hold
Monday, 11 April 2022 15:05
Instead of having a dedicated reserve force, the U.S. Space Force would have a regular active-duty force with full-time and part-time members, according to a proposal the Department of the Air Force submitted to Congress April 1.