~orbitalindex | Issue No. 291 (64)
-
-
-
Startup takes new approach to space-based solar power
Aetherflux announced intentions to develop a LEO constellation
-
-
Volta Space Technologies unveils plans for lunar power satellite network
Volta Space Technologies
-
-
-
-
Axiom and Prada unveil design of Artemis spacesuit
Axiom Space unveiled the exterior design of its AxEMU suit
-
ESA - Robotic Exploration of Mars - ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO)
ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter
-
-
Frosty volcanoes discovered in Mars’s tropics
first time water frost has been observed near the Martian equator
-
Discovery of ancient stars on the stellar thin disk of the Milky Way | AIP
Gaia data suggests numerous ancient stars in the Milky Way’s disk
-
How the 'heart and lungs' of a galaxy extend its life
Supermassive black holes seem to regulate the rate of star formation in galaxies
-
Study: Titan’s lakes may be shaped by waves
the observed coastlines of lakes and seas on Titan are likely shaped by erosion from waves
-
-
Early Galaxies Were Not Too Big for Their Britches After All
harboring brightly glowing black hole accretion disks whose light makes the galaxies appear larger
-
Astronomers track bubbles on star’s surface in most detailed video yet
ESO’s ALMA captured images of gas bubbles on the surface of massive star R Doradus
-
-
-
Inversion Space gets reentry license for orbital cargo delivery capsule demo | TechCrunch
reentry of their demonstrator Ray cargo capsule
-
-
NASA’s TDRS System to Stop Onboarding New Missions in November
stop onboarding new missions
-
NASA Contracts SpaceX, Amazon, Viasat, and Others for TDRS Replacement System
commercial replacement
-
Future of Copernicus Expansion Missions secured
expand Copernicus with six additional missions
-
-
How SpaceX's Starship Caught Its Booster on Re-entry: A Control Engineering Masterpiece
A quick look at some of the control systems approaches required
-
APOD: June 5, 1998 - Neutrinos in the Sun
image of the Sun created by neutrinos passing through the Earth
-
NASA - Sun-Earth Day - Technology Through Time - #50 Ancient Sunlight
photons take 100,000 years or more to work their way through the Sun
-
First measurement of sun’s real-time energy
observe (fortunately) consistent energy output
-