European Space Agency funds Phlux Technology, Airbus Defence and Space and The University of Sheffield to help develop 2.5 Gbps free space optical satellite terminals
Related Articles
-
IceCube detector confirms deep-space "ghost particle" phenomenon
Over 2,500 years ago, Greek philosophers debated whether the nature of reality was impermanence or constant change. Heraclitus was the champion of change, pointing to the march of the seasons and the ebb and flow of the tides. In contrast, Parmenides, a near-contemporary of Heraclitus, claimed that change was illusory and constancy was the rule. Modern physics has found subatomic examples that support both ways of thinking. For example, the electrons found in your atoms have been unchanged...
-
NASA Sets Coverage for Dragon Spacecraft Relocation on Space Station
The relocation, supported by flight controllers at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston and SpaceX in Hawthorne, California, will free up Harmony’s
-
Starliner: Nasa to fly new Boeing space craft to ISS
Two Nasa astronauts are due to set off to the International Space Station in a new spacecraft in the early hours of Tuesday morning UK time.