
Copernical Team
Study finds strongest evidence yet for local sources of cosmic ray electrons

Blast from the past: Gamma-ray burst strikes Earth from distant exploding star

The Long Wait

US embarks on ambitious quantum technology endeavor

Here Comes the Sun: Perseverance Readies for Solar Conjunction

Europe's quantum decade extends into space

Southern Launch to host HyImpulse's Pioneering SR75 launch in South Australia

Bouncing comets could deliver building blocks for life to exoplanets

MetOp Second Generation weather satellite pair show off

Having satellites in different types of orbit is essential to delivering data to forecast the weather accurately. With the first Meteosat Third Generation Imager satellite safely in geostationary orbit since December 2022, it’s also time to focus on its polar-orbiting cousin, the MetOp Second Generation mission. And now, for the first time, two MetOp Second Generation satellites have been brought together to stand side-by-side for testing.
Mini mass spectrometer ready for Moon mission

The Astrobotic Peregrine lunar lander, due to launch to the Moon later this year, carrying the PITMS instrument on the payload deck on its left side.
PITMS stands for Peregrine Ion-Trap Mass Spectrometer, and it is a device that will sniff out molecules close to the Moon's surface to chart the composition of the lunar exosphere, the particles buzzing around its surface that don't quite make up an atmosphere.
The Peregrine lander is aiming for a lunar touchdown in Sinus Viscositatis near the Gruithuisen volcanic domes, on the northern lunar hemisphere. It is the first time that a spacecraft will land