
Copernical Team
Beaming with science

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station farewelled over 2000 kg of scientific experiments and hardware on Sunday 23 January as a cargo Dragon spacecraft began its return to Earth.
ESA astronaut Matthias Maurer captured the resupply vehicle in all its glory as it departed the orbital outpost at 15:40 GMT/16:40 CET. It splashed down approximately 29 hours later off the coast of Florida, USA.
The SpaceX spacecraft arrived at the Space Station just before Christmas, bringing new experiments alongside Christmas treats. It returned with a bellyful of science, including several European experiments that were quickly transported to NASA’s Space Station
Athens under snow

Making a splash in a lava sea

Volcanoes, impact craters, tectonic faults, river channels and a lava sea: a vast amount of information is captured in a relatively small area in this geologically rich new image from ESA’s Mars Express.
Forecasting performance of a space antenna – before it gets built

Antennas are among the most complex systems aboard a satellite – making them demanding to produce and often unpredictable to test. Tiny variables in their building, mounting or operation may impact their working performance in a big way. So ESA teamed up with Danish company TICRA to develop a method of forecasting such discrepancies well before an antenna construction even starts.
SpaceX delivers trio of Cape Town built satellites into orbit

Dramatic Changes at Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai

Providing GPS-quality timing accuracy without GPS

Teaming up to deliver a new Airborne ISR SATCOM capability for MilGov Operators

ULA launches two new Space Force tracking satellites into orbit

Israel Knocks out simulated Iranian missile using Arrow-3 Interceptor
