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Mission to clean up space junk with magnets set for launch
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Space debris: the scrapheap in the sky
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KISPE to develop proton testing campaign for next-gen microsatellite technologies KISPE Space Systems, a Farnborough-based programme execution and systems engineering company, is in collaboration with the University of Surrey, making detailed preparations for a comprehensive proton-testing campaign on its next-generation microsatellite platform microelectronics
These tests will enable the company to continue the development of the platform and drive the commercialisation of the microprocessors for future, low-cost small-satellite missions.
SPRINT, the national business support programme, will fund the planning and preparation for comprehensive proton testing campaign and enable KIPSE Space to develop virtualised environments for collaborators to develop solutions based on these processors and initiate evaluations of a new group of commercial processors for additional mission applications.
»Plastic Island: Space is Filling up with Junk but Elon Musk isn t Telling You That
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Plastic Island: Space is Filling up with Junk but Elon Musk isn t Telling You That
Space debris in Earth s geosynchronous Earth orbit (GEO) and the cloud of objects in low Earth orbit (LEO). | Image for representation
If Galileo were alive today, he would see not the stars and planets that he saw from his telescope but the millions of pieces of space debris and plastic hanging around in space today.
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In the 17th-century, when Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei looked out into the unknown vastness of space using his ingenious telescope, he saw the sun, the moon, planets, and stars. Had the polymath been looking through the telescope in the year 2021, he perhaps would have been disappointed to find not stars and other space oddities so eulogized by mortals but bits of trash and plastic.