
Copernical Team
Europa Clipper will investigate whether an icy moon of Jupiter can support life

NASA's Hubble, New Horizons team up for a simultaneous look at Uranus

SwRI's UVS Instrument on Jupiter-Bound Spacecraft Passes Critical In-Flight Test

Hubble watches Jupiter's Great Red Spot behave like a stress ball

NASA seeks logistics designs for Artemis moon missions

Anti-dust shield advancements in China's lunar exploration efforts

NASA wants to send humans to Mars in the 2030s

New insights into how Mars became uninhabitable

Hera takes flight: Didymos, here we come

The day began with an 85% chance that bad weather would cause a launch delay: it ended with ESA’s Hera mission successfully in space and en route to the Didymos binary asteroid system.
At 16:52 CEST (14:52 UTC) on 7 October 2024, Hera took to the skies aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida, USA. After a smooth 76-minute ascent, the spacecraft separated from its launcher, and, a few minutes later, ESA’s ESOC mission operations centre in Germany assumed control of the spacecraft.
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Space-made weld scrutinised in ESA lab

ESA engineers have focused microscopes, hardness testers and an X-ray computer aided tomography machine onto a special aluminium weld just a single centimetre across – the historic result of the very first autonomous welding to be performed in space, and the first ESA has been involved with.