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Reçu aujourd’hui — 3 décembre 2025 6.5 📰 Sciences English

Honoring a career opening doors for the commercial space sector

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
Phil McAlister. Credit: NASA

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated at a Dec. 2 ceremony hosted […]

The post Honoring a career opening doors for the commercial space sector appeared first on SpaceNews.

Defending NASA science in the face of sweeping budget cuts

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
Casey Dreier. Credit: The Planetary Society

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post Defending NASA science in the face of sweeping budget cuts appeared first on SpaceNews.

Sophisticated maneuvers from a new spacecraft

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
Photo of Impulse Space’s Mira in-space vehicle in orbit. Credit: Impulse Space.

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post Sophisticated maneuvers from a new spacecraft appeared first on SpaceNews.

Leading the integration of commercial and military capabilities in space

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
Maj. Gen. Stephen Purdy at the 2025 Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Colo. Credit: U.S. Air Force

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post Leading the integration of commercial and military capabilities in space appeared first on SpaceNews.

Making seamless connections between D2D patchwork

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
Space42 and e& executives signed their partnership agreement at the GITEX Global conference in Dubai. Credit: Space42

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post Making seamless connections between D2D patchwork appeared first on SpaceNews.

Using AI to scan the Earth

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
CogniSat-6, built by Open Cosmos with Ubotica edge processing and software for artificial intelligence, is the platform for Dynamic Targeting. Credit: Ubotica

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post Using AI to scan the Earth appeared first on SpaceNews.

Teaming up to create multi-orbit broadband

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
SES’s Betzdorf headquarters in Luxembourg, shown here with its satellite antenna field, anchors the company’s global operations following its Intelsat acquisition.

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post Teaming up to create multi-orbit broadband appeared first on SpaceNews.

A rapid deployment of a space traffic management platform

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
The TraCSS logo. Credit: NOAA

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post A rapid deployment of a space traffic management platform appeared first on SpaceNews.

Spotting smaller wildfires sooner than ever

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
A small fire in Oregon imaged by the FireSat Protoflight satellite that went undetected by existing satellites. Credit: MUON SPACE/Earth Fire Alliance

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post Spotting smaller wildfires sooner than ever appeared first on SpaceNews.

Making multiple breakthroughs in spacecraft swarms

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
Starling is testing autonomous swarm navigation in low Earth orbit. Credit: NASA/Daniel Rutter

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post Making multiple breakthroughs in spacecraft swarms appeared first on SpaceNews.

A vindication for NASA’s CLPS program, and a victory for Firefly

3 décembre 2025 à 01:00
Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander captured footage of the moon during its third lunar orbit maneuver on Feb. 24 that inserted the spacecraft in a near-circular low lunar orbit. This photo was captured about 100 km above the lunar surface. Credit: Firefly Aerospace

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

The post A vindication for NASA’s CLPS program, and a victory for Firefly appeared first on SpaceNews.

Reçu hier — 2 décembre 2025 6.5 📰 Sciences English

The U.S. Senate vs. the Athena Plan — NASA on trial

2 décembre 2025 à 16:30
Isaacman

On December 3, 2025, the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation will hold a hearing to examine the re-nomination of Mr. Jared Isaacman for NASA Administrator. A central issue at the Hearing will be the implications of Mr. Isaacman’s leaked “Project Athena Strategic Plan” (the Plan), which outlines potential reasons for and actions […]

The post The U.S. Senate vs. the Athena Plan — NASA on trial appeared first on SpaceNews.

It’s time to give NASA an astrophysics nervous system

2 décembre 2025 à 15:00
The element assembly wheel of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. Credit: NASA

The most tragic event in modern astronomy isn’t a funding cut or a launch failure. It is a “missed connection.” Right now, a neutron star collision somewhere in the distant universe is blasting out a short gamma-ray burst. In seconds, that signal will fade. In minutes, the afterglow will vanish. While a few elite robotic […]

The post It’s time to give NASA an astrophysics nervous system appeared first on SpaceNews.

Extra carbon in the atmosphere may disrupt radio communications

2 décembre 2025 à 15:13

Higher levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the Earth’s atmosphere could harm radio communications by enhancing a disruptive effect in the ionosphere. According to researchers at Kyushu University, Japan, who modelled the effect numerically for the first time, this little-known consequence of climate change could have significant impacts on shortwave radio systems such as those employed in broadcasting, air traffic control and navigation.

“While increasing CO2 levels in the atmosphere warm the Earth’s surface, they actually cool the ionosphere,” explains study leader Huixin Liu of Kyushu’s Faculty of Science. “This cooling doesn’t mean it is all good: it decreases the air density in the ionosphere and accelerates wind circulation. These changes affect the orbits and lifespan of satellites and space debris and also disrupt radio communications through localized small-scale plasma irregularities.”

The sporadic E-layer

One such irregularity is a dense but transient layer of metal ions that forms between 90‒120 km above the Earth’s surface. This sporadic E-layer (Es), as it is known, is roughly 1‒5 km thick and can stretch from tens to hundreds of kilometres in the horizontal direction. Its density is highest during the day, and it peaks around the time of the summer solstice.

The formation of the Es is hard to predict, and the mechanisms behind it are not fully understood. However, the prevailing “wind shear” theory suggests that vertical shears in horizontal winds, combined with the Earth’s magnetic field, cause metallic ions such as Fe+, Na+, and Ca+ to converge in the ionospheric dynamo region and form thin layers of enhanced ionization. The ions themselves largely come from metals in meteoroids that enter the Earth’s atmosphere and disintegrate at altitudes between around 80‒100 km.

Effects of increasing CO2 concentrations

While previous research has shown that increases in CO2 trigger atmospheric changes on a global scale, relatively little is known about how these increases affect smaller-scale ionospheric phenomena like the Es. In the new work, which is published in Geophysical Research Letters, Liu and colleagues used a whole-atmosphere model to simulate the upper atmosphere at two different CO2 concentrations: 315 ppm and 667 ppm.

“The 315 ppm represents the CO2 concentration in 1958, the year in which recordings started at the Mauna Loa observatory, Hawaii,” Liu explains. “The 667 ppm represents the projected CO2 concentration for the year 2100, based on a conservative assumption that the increase in CO2 is constant at a rate of around 2.5 ppm/year since 1958.”

The researchers then evaluated how these different CO2 levels influence a phenomenon known as vertical ion convergence (VIC) which, according to the wind shear theory, drives the Es. The simulations revealed that the higher the atmospheric CO2 levels, the greater the VIC at altitudes of 100-120 km. “What is more, this increase is accompanied by the VIC hotspots shifting downwards by approximately 5 km,” says Liu. “The VIC patterns also change dramatically during the day and these diurnal variability patterns continue into the night.”

According to the researchers, the physical mechanism underlying these changes depends on two factors. The first is reduced collisions between metallic ions and the neutral atmosphere as a direct result of cooling in the ionosphere. The second is changes in the zonal wind shear, which are likely caused by long-term trends in atmosphere tides.

“These results are exciting because they show that the impacts of CO2 increase can extend all the way from Earth’s surface to altitudes at which HF and VHF radio waves propagate and communications satellites orbit,” Liu tells Physics World. “This may be good news for ham radio amateurs, as you will likely receive more signals from faraway countries more often. For radio communications, however, especially at HF and VHF frequencies employed for aviation, ships and rescue operations, it means more noise and frequent disruption in communication and hence safety. The telecommunications industry might therefore need to adjust their frequencies or facility design in the future.”

The post Extra carbon in the atmosphere may disrupt radio communications appeared first on Physics World.

Phase-changing material generates vivid tunable colours

2 décembre 2025 à 13:00
A toy gecko featuring a flexible layer of the thermally tunable colour coating
Switchable camouflage A toy gecko featuring a flexible layer of the thermally tunable colour coating appears greenish blue at room temperature (left); upon heating (right), its body changes to a dark magenta colour. (Courtesy: Aritra Biswa)

Structural colours – created using nanostructures that scatter and reflect specific wavelengths of light – offer a non-toxic, fade-resistant and environmentally friendly alternative to chemical dyes. Large-scale production of structural colour-based materials, however, has been hindered by fabrication challenges and a lack of effective tuning mechanisms.

In a step towards commercial viability, a team at the University of Central Florida has used vanadium dioxide (VO2) – a material with temperature-sensitive optical and structural properties – to generate tunable structural colour on both rigid and flexible surfaces, without requiring complex nanofabrication.

Senior author Debashis Chanda and colleagues created their structural colour platform by stacking a thin layer of VO2 on top of a thick, reflective layer of aluminium to form a tunable thin-film cavity. At specific combinations of VO2 grain size and layer thickness this structure strongly absorbs certain frequency bands of visible light, producing the appearance of vivid colours.

The key enabler of this approach is the fact that at a critical transition temperature, VO2 reversibly switches from insulator to metal, accompanied by a change in its crystalline structure. This phase change alters the interference conditions in the thin-film cavity, varying the reflectance spectra and changing the perceived colour. Controlling the thickness of the VO2 layer enables the generation of a wide range of structural colours.

The bilayer structures are grown via a combination of magnetron sputtering and electron-beam deposition, techniques compatible with large-scale production. By adjusting the growth parameters during fabrication, the researchers could broaden the colour palette and control the temperature at which the phase transition occurs. To expand the available colour range further, they added a third ultrathin layer of high-refractive index titanium dioxide on top of the bilayer.

The researchers describe a range of applications for their flexible coloration platform, including a colour-tunable maple leaf pattern, a thermal sensing label on a coffee cup and tunable structural coloration on flexible fabrics. They also demonstrated its use on complex shapes, such as a toy gecko with a flexible tunable colour coating and an embedded heater.

“These preliminary demonstrations validate the feasibility of developing thermally responsive sensors, reconfigurable displays and dynamic colouration devices, paving the way for innovative solutions across fields such as wearable electronic, cosmetics, smart textiles and defence technologies,” the team concludes.

The research is described in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The post Phase-changing material generates vivid tunable colours appeared first on Physics World.

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