
Copernical Team
NASA's InSight lander: The lonely fate of a robot on Mars

Covered in the red dust that sealed its fate, the NASA InSight lander is slowly shutting down, more than 250 million kilometers from home.
With its solar panels now obscured by the red planet's debris, the four-year-old robot is running out of power. One by one, its instruments are being taken offline: its robotic arm moving into "retirement pose," its seismometer likely to be turned off sometime in June.
Dr. Catherine Johnson, co-investigator on the InSight science team and professor in the department of earth, ocean and atmospheric sciences, discusses what the team discovered, what questions are left to answer, and just what will happen to the little lander that could.
What was the lander's mission and what did it find?
April in orbit: two ESA astronauts and plenty of science

April 2022 was an exciting month for Europe in space. After a few weather-related delays, ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti was launched to the International Space Station on 27 April with Crew-4 for her second mission, Minerva. She was welcomed aboard the International Space Station by Matthias Maurer, marking the first time since 2011 that two ESA astronauts had been together in orbit. Look back on another busy month aboard the orbital outpost in this regular summary from the International Space Station.
Landmark partnership between the US and UK to launch new era of spaceflight

4D composite printing can improve the wings of drones

OneWeb and Telefonica collaborate to extend connectivity across Europe and Latin America

Next Stop: Hawksbill Gap

EUSPA celebrates its first 365 days of new Galileo operations

Momentus "Go for Launch" for First Vigoride Mission

Could people breathe the air on Mars

What you need to know about NASA's Boeing Orbital Flight Test-2
