Satellites and spacecraft in the vast region between Earth and the moon and just beyond—called cislunar space—are crucial for ...
Developers of wildfire-detection satellites are moving beyond raw data delivery, adding tools that show firefighters and researchers when satellites will actually pass over the areas they are watching ...
Elon Musk’s SpaceX is set to massively expand its orbital footprint in a bid to power next-generation artificial intelligence ...
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
Space junk disaster spirals after Russian satellite shatters in orbit
When a Russian satellite shattered in orbit, the fragments did not simply drift away into the void. They spread into busy ...
SpaceX has announced that it's lowering the orbits of some 4,400 Starlink satellites following a near miss with a new Chinese ...
The company is planning ways to meet the energy and computing needs of AI, even as the company mulls a merger with xAI.
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
A defunct “inspector” satellite shatters in graveyard orbit, and the risk doesn’t stay buried
Is the “graveyard orbit” still a safe parking spot to have spacecraft that will never take off again? The disintegration of the Russian Luch/Olymp satellite has moved that question to the fringes of ...
Cooperation, responsibility critical in space race as orbits grow more crowded, say industry players
With space underpinning everything from connectivity to climate monitoring, leaders at the inaugural Space Summit in ...
Satellites and spacecraft in the vast region between the earth and moon and just beyond - called cislunar space - are crucial ...
Hundreds of satellites may soon be flying in orbital regions that are already too packed to allow safe and long-term operations, a new study suggests. The study found that, while in 2019 only 0.2% of ...
SpaceX has formally acquired another one of Elon Musk’s companies, xAi, the space company announced on Monday afternoon.
The Aviationist on MSN
NRO Officially Declassifies JUMPSEAT First Gen Signals Intelligence Satellites
Launched between 1971 and 1987 primarily to collect intelligence data on foreign weapon testing, the last satellites in the JUMPSEAT family were withdrawn from service in 2006. A memorandum dated Dec.
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