An astrophysicist interview underlines the growing risk of satellites, from the increasingly crowded skies, falling to Earth.
NISAR’s first radar images reveal how this powerful satellite will help track disasters, monitor crops, and study Earth’s changing surface.
If Starlink continues scaling up operations, there could be as many as five of these satellites raining down on us daily.
In the next few months, from its perch atop a mountain in Chile, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory will begin surveying the cosmos with the largest camera ever built. Every three nights, it will produce a ...
The race to connect the world through satellite internet has created an unexpected casualty: our view of the cosmos. A new study reveals that major satellite constellations, including Starlink, ...
An L3Harris-developed imager on the GOES-U weather satellite will soon launch from Cape Canaveral and settle into orbit 22,236 miles above Earth, serving as "Florida's new sentinel in the sky" ...
The satellite was one of China's first-ever commercial Earth imaging satellites. RIP, SuperView 1-02. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it ...
The deactivated Lincoln Experimental Satellite (LES)-1 satellite resumed its communications after being silent for decades, ...
Smarter decisions about real-world problems start with better data—and Earth observation can provide just that, thanks to ...
A suspected meteor spotted in the night sky over Southern California and Nevada was identified as the remains of a Starlink ...
Right now, satellites are broadcasting your most private data in plaintext. A groundbreaking academic study just exposed a catastrophic security failure: ...
Today, Nextivity announced support for Direct-To-Cell (D2C) services on its CEL-FI ROAM R41 and CEL-FI GO G41 products.