
Copernical Team
In booming satellite market, micro-rockets are the next big thing

More and more miniature satellites are being launched every year, driving up demand for smaller rockets.
Contemporary life would hardly be possible without satellites. Much of what people do on Earth today relies heavily on what's happening high above their heads—from monitoring wildfires, deforestation and sea-surface temperatures to enabling connections to new mobile technologies like 5G in hard-to-reach areas.
A recent wave of cheaper, miniature satellites being sent into low orbits of 500 to 1,000 kilometers above Earth by the likes of Elon Musk's SpaceX and UK-based OneWeb signals a growing trend.
Less is more
With some tracking the globe's whole landmass and providing unprecedented detail, these satellites can be the size of a shoebox or even smaller.
Ariane 5 flight VA260, Juice: fully integrated and ready for rollout

S Korea to conduct 1st launch of commercial-grade satellite

Juice: running on solar power in the dark

Welcome to Jupiter space: to one side looms the vast cloudy face of the largest planet in our Solar System; in the other appears a shrunken Sun, like a spotlight in the sky, with just 3% of the illumination from Earth orbit arriving here. This basic fact presented a major challenge to those planning ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, Juice, mission: how to make solar power work in such a gloomy environment, located an average 778 million km away from our parent star?
Beneath the Earth, ancient ocean floor likely surrounds the core

Was plate tectonics occurring when life first formed on Earth?

NASA awards agreement for high-resolution synthetic aperture radar

Fish-inspired, self-charging electric battery may help power space applications

Northrop Grumman expands space technology capabilities in Huntsville

Musk's Twitter marks BBC, NPR as 'government funded' but not Tesla or SpaceX
