Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Space News

Location American Space News for 5 December 2022
Australia starts building 'momentous' radio telescope Australia on Monday started building a vast network of antennas in the Outback, its section of what planners say will eventually become one of the most powerful radio telescopes in the world.
Read More
2
0
Hubble telescope captures the colorful fireworks left by a star's violent death Using data from the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers have created a stunning image of a cosmic fireworks display resulting from the explosion of a massive star.
Read More
1
0
Chris Pearson takes the reins at Agile Space Industries Chris Pearson, former Roccor CEO and Redwire executive vice president, is the new CEO of Durango, Colorado-based propulsion startup Agile Space Industries. The post Chris Pearson takes the reins at Agile Space Industries...
Read More
1
0
NASA is testing a new robotic arm that really knows how to chill out Future planetary missions could explore in extremely cold temperatures that stymie existing spacecraft, thanks to a project under development at JPL.
Read More
0
0
NASA capsule flies over Apollo landing sites, heads home NASA's Orion capsule and its test dummies swooped one last time around the moon Monday, flying over a couple Apollo landing sites before heading home.
Read More
0
0
Op-ed | Let's keep an open dialogue on how to protect satellites on orbit The conflict in Ukraine has shined a bright light on the policy ambiguity regarding the options available to the U.S. government to protect commercial satellite operators The post Op-ed | Let's keep an open dialogue on h...
Read More
0
0
NASA delivers first flight hardware to ESA for Lunar Pathfinder NASA delivered the first flight hardware for the Lunar Pathfinder mission to ESA (European Space Agency), which formally accepted the instrument on Nov. 4. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, devel...
Read More
0
0
Image: Hubble spies emission nebula-star cluster duo Against a backdrop littered with tiny pinpricks of light glint a few, brighter stars. This whole collection is NGC 1858, an open star cluster in the northwest region of the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of o...
Read More
0
0
'Andor' sound and VFX wizards on bringing a grittier 'Star Wars' to life (exclusive) An exclusive interview with "Andor's" VFX producer TJ Falls and sound editor David Acord reveals how the gritty, realistic feel of the series was created.
Read More
0
0
Construction begins on world's largest radio telescope after decades of preparations Ground has finally been broken today at two sites in Africa and Australia that will host the Square Kilometer Array Observatory (SKAO), the largest radio telescope in the world.
Read More
0
0
Cosmic ray counts hidden in spacecraft data highlight influence of solar cycle at Mars and Venus Measurements by ESA's long-serving twin missions, Mars Express and Venus Express, have captured the dance between the intensity of high-energy cosmic rays and the influence of the sun's activity across our inner solar sy...
Read More
0
0
Black hole 'carnivals' may produce the signals seen by gravitational-wave detectors Since 2015, the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration have detected about 85 pairs of black holes crashing into each other. We now know that Einstein was right: gravitational waves are generated by these systems as they inspira...
Read More
0
0
Researchers say space atomic clocks could help uncover the nature of dark matter Studying an atomic clock on-board a spacecraft inside the orbit of Mercury and very near to the sun might be the trick to uncovering the nature of dark matter, suggests a new study published in Nature Astronomy.
Read More
0
0
In Australia and South Africa, construction has started on the biggest radio observatory in Earth's history Construction of the world's biggest radio astronomy facility, the SKA Observatory, begins today. The observatory is a global project 30 years in the making.
Read More
0
0
Research inspects a distant gamma-ray emitting blazar An international team of astronomers has performed a long-term multiwavelength study of a distant gamma-ray emitting blazar known as 1ES 0647+250. Results of the research, published November 23 on arXiv.org, yield import...
Read More
0
0
Artemis lunar flyby: Orion is coming home Today at 17:43 CET (16:43 GMT) the European Service Module for Orion fired its main engine at less than 127 km from the Moon's surface to put the Artemis spacecraft on a collision course with Earth.
Read More
0
0
NASA's Lucy asteroid-scouting mission resumes work on solar arrays in deep space The team behind NASA's Lucy asteroid mission is resuming work with the spacecraft to fully deploy and latch its second solar array after a recent successful Earth flyby.
Read More
0
0
Giant mantle plume reveals Mars is more active than previously thought On Earth, shifting tectonic plates reshuffle the planet's surface and make for a dynamic interior, so the absence of such processes on Mars led many to think of it as a dead planet, where not much happened in the past 3 ...
Read More
0
0
Maybe we don't see Aliens Because They're Waiting to Hear a Signal From us First We’ve had a long-running series here at UT on potential solutions Fermi Paradox – why aren’t we able to detect any alien life out there in the Universe? But more possible solutions are being developed all the time....
Read More
0
0
NASA Administrator Names New Leadership at Two Agency Centers NASA Administrator Bill Nelson has named Bradley Flick director of the agency's Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California, effective immediately. The administrator also has named Dave Mitchell to fill the r...
Read More
0
0
Massive eruption from icy volcanic comet detected in solar system Astronomers observed a major eruption from a volcanic comet flying through the solar system, likely spewing more than 1 million tons of debris into space.
Read More
0
0

NASA Wants to Build Landing Pads on the Moon

Universe Today - 5 Dec 2022 19:12
NASA Wants to Build Landing Pads on the Moon NASA has started engaging with commercial partners are some out-there projects. One of the most recent is a six year, $57.2 million deal with ICON, a company based in Austin, Texas that specializes in in-situ resource ut...
Read More
0
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard