Tiny Satellites Are the Future of Space Exploration0
- From Around the Web, Space
- February 14, 2020
The future of space exploration might be through tiny satellites that can fit in the palm of your hand.
The future of space exploration might be through tiny satellites that can fit in the palm of your hand.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX has destroyed one of its own rockets a day after bad weather forced the company to delay its final milestone test before flying Nasa astronauts from US soil.
People worldwide are already reporting unidentified lights in the sky as Starlink gets off the ground. It could be just the beginning.
SpaceX launched 60 mini satellites Monday, the second batch of an orbiting network meant to provide global internet coverage.
In the future, we’re expected to have sites on other planets, and the conflict about it is that if they should be called settlement or colonization.
On Saturday, Sept.28th, Elon Musk stood before a crowd at SpaceX’s testing facility in Boca Chica, Texas.
Company unveils newly assembled Starship, predicts orbital flight in next 6 months
In the last few months, teams of SpaceX engineers working on the flat coastal plains of South Texas and in a nondescript industrial yard on Florida’s Space Coast have been building two futuristic-looking stainless steel rockets — or Starships — prototypes for a reusable vehicle the company claims could one day ferry people to Mars.
ESA say its Aeolus Earth observation satellite fired thrusters to avoid crash
Starman’s orbit will soon keep him very far from the Earth, until 2047.