A new publication details how a team at the University of Arizona's Space4 Center tracked down a contested piece of space junk that created two impact craters when it crashed onto the surface of the moon. The analysis suggests an undisclosed payload was involved.
TORONTO, Oct. 18, 2023 As we evaluate our midpoint progress on the 2030 Agenda, the challenge ahead is clear: many of the Sustainable Development Goals remain unmet as we approach the.
University of Arizona students and faculty members completed a comprehensive study to track and characterize satellites, using a ground-based sensor they developed to measure satellites' brightness, speed and paths through the sky.
The U.S. Space Surveillance Network tracks tens of thousands of artificial satellites orbiting Earth. But no such group monitors traffic around the moon, or in the cislunar space space in between.Now University of Arizona has received a $7.5 million grant from the U.S. Air Force Research Lab Space Vehicles Directorate to do exactly that.