
Copernical Team
Astronomers dig out buried black holes with NASA's Chandra

Martian meteorite contains large diversity of organic compounds

Pausing to take in the view: Sols 3710-3711

In search of a new marker band drill site: Sols 3708-3709

SpaceX capsule lands safely on return from ISS

Rocket Lab sets new date for first Electron launch from U.S. soil

Private U.S. space company ABL fails to launch from Alaska

Russia to send rescue mission to space station

Russia will launch new capsule to return space station crew

Space junk, not meteorites, remains biggest threat to spacecraft

Russian announced on Wednesday a February mission to the International Space Station to pick up crew members left stranded after a strike damaged the capsule that was to take them home.
Didier Schmitt, the European Space Agency's head of human and robotic exploration, said it was not rare for tiny meteorites to hit the space station.
The micrometeorites can be traveling at speeds from 10 to 30 kilometers (6-18 miles) a second—"much faster than a shotgun bullet," Schmitt said.
That is why, when the space station's large observation window is not in use, it is shuttered with "very, very thick layers of protective materials," he said.