Jena-Optronik’s RVS3000 rendezvous and docking sensor will support the autonomous approach of Sierra Nevada’s Dream Chaser to the ISS, making it the fourth ISS supply spacecraft to use the sensor technology from Jena.
Jena-Optronik’s RVS3000 rendezvous and docking sensor will support the autonomous approach of Sierra Nevada’s Dream Chaser to the ISS, making it the fourth ISS supply spacecraft to use the sensor technology from Jena.
The RSS feed has been moved to http://www.sat-index.co.uk/feed/rssoutput.xml and https://www.sat-nd.com/feed/rssoutput.xml
Rocket: Chang Zheng 11; Payload: two GECAM astronomy satellites; Date: 9 December 2020, 2014 UTC; Launch site: Xichang Satellite Launch…
The first mockup of the RD-0124MS rocket engine, developed for use in the Soyuz-5 perspective rocket was built at Voronezh…
NASA and Boeing are targeting 29 March for the launch of Starliner’s second uncrewed flight test to the International Space…
Supporting a rideshare manifest with a mix of small and large satellites, TriSept Corporation has selected Relativity Space for a…
Airbus has successfully qualified Europe’s first five metre deployable antenna reflector. The 70 kilogram deployable reflector will help enable higher…