
Copernical Team
China's Long March 11 rocket conducts 16 consecutive successful launches

Scientist reveals goals for future lunar research station

Scientists and students to develop the first Estonian lunar rover

Lunar Outpost and EPE will co-lead their consortium in supporting Australia's first-ever mission to the Moon.

Benchmark Space Systems fires up metal plasma and bi-prop thruster production

World leading propulsion system now integrated onto Australian-made satellite

Pale Blue successfully operates its water-based propulsion system in orbit

Astronomers sound alarm about light pollution from satellites

Astronomers on Monday warned that the light pollution created by the soaring number of satellites orbiting Earth poses an "unprecedented global threat to nature."
The number of satellites in low Earth orbit have more than doubled since 2019, when US company SpaceX launched the first "mega-constellation," which comprise thousands of satellites.
An armada of new internet constellations are planned to launch soon, adding thousands more satellites to the already congested area fewer than 2,000 kilometers (1,250 miles) above Earth.
Each new satellite increases the risk that it will smash into another object orbiting Earth, creating yet more debris.
This can create a chain reaction in which cascading collisions create ever smaller fragments of debris, further adding to the cloud of "space junk" reflecting light back to Earth.
Ariane 5 rocket decorated with winning Juice artwork

Earth observation supports latest UN climate report

The final instalment of the sixth assessment report by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has been released today. The report warns that the planet has already warmed 1.1°C above pre-industrial levels, resulting in more frequent and intense extreme weather events that are causing increasingly dangerous impacts on nature and people in every region of the world.
The report includes a greater contribution of Earth observation data than its previous iterations in providing the physical evidence of Earth’s changing climate system – from sea-level rise, growing greenhouse-gas emissions and melting sea ice.