Skip to main content
Ingenium Logo

You are leaving IngeniumCanada.org

✖


This link leads to an external website that Ingenium does not control. Please read the third-party’s privacy policies before entering personal information or conducting a transaction on their site.

Have questions? Review our Privacy Statement

Vous quittez IngeniumCanada.org

✖


Ce lien mène à un site Web externe qu'Ingenium ne contrôle pas. Veuillez lire les politiques de confidentialité des tiers avant de partager des renseignements personnels ou d'effectuer une transaction sur leur site.

Questions? Consultez notre Énoncé de confidentialité

Ingenium The Channel

Langue

  • Français
Search Toggle

Menu des liens rapides

  • Ingenium Locations
  • Shop
  • Donate
  • Join
Menu

Main Navigation

  • Browse
    • Categories
    • Media Types
    • Boards
    • Featured Stories
  • About
    • About The Channel
    • Content Partners

Explore

Space

Filters

Clear All

Media

  • Article (6)

Publication

  • (-) BBC - Home (1)
  • (-) BBC - Homepage (1)
  • CBC.ca (1)
  • Discover Magazine Blogs (1)
  • Home | The Planetary Society (4)
  • (-) MMX - Martian Moons eXploration (1)
  • NASA (4)
  • NASA Earth Observatory (1)
  • NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) (2)
  • NASA Spitzer Space Telescope (1)
  • (-) Nature Research (1)
  • public.nrao.edu (1)
  • (-) Space.com (2)

Reading Duration

  • Long (1)
  • (-) Medium (6)
  • Short (2)
6 Results:
Earth as seen from space
10 m
Article
Space
Share

The next generation of Earth Observation: Earth-i

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 28, 2017
A new company called Earth-i has announced it will be launching a constellation of satellites into Earth's orbit that will download "fast-turn-around pictures and colour video of the planet's surface."
An artist's impression of the Cassini spacecraft in the foreground and Saturn in the background.
8 m
Article
Space
Share

The Beginning of the End for Cassini

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 21, 2017
A short description of the upcoming Grand Finale of the Cassini Spacecraft. Over the next 5 months, Cassini will make 22 plunges between Saturn's rings and the planet itself. No craft has ever been that close. During this final phase, Cassini will make close up measurements of the rings for the first time, image the planet's cloud-tops in unprecedented detail, and even answer long-standing questions like: how fast does Saturn actually rotate? It's going to be a very interesting 5 months.
Image of Phobos
10 m
Article
Space
Share

MMX - Martian Moons eXploration

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 21, 2017
In early April 2017, the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS), a division of the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), announced a new robotic explorer to be launched towards Mars in 2024: the Martian Moons Exploration (MMX). The goal is not to observe the red planet, but its two moons: Phobos and Deimos. These two moons (about 25 km wide) are just a fraction the size of Earth's Moon (about 3400 km wide), and their origins are still disputed. Maybe Phobos and Deimos were
An artist's impression of space junk orbiting the Earth.
9 m
Article
Space
Share

What to do about Space Junk

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 21, 2017
Human's have been launching satellites into space since 1957, and now the current number of objects in orbit larger than 10 cm is about 23,000. The growing number poses a real threat to the future of space exploration. Humanity will need to solve this problem moving forward, and ideas are currently being discussed.
A digital reconstruction of a dormant ice-volcano on the dwarf planet Ceres
10 m
Article
Space
Share

Disappearing Ice Volcanoes on the Dwarf Planet Ceres

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 21, 2017
The only mountain on Ceres may slowly disappear over a few hundred million years, spreading out like honey on a plate.
A graphic of the 7 new planets found around TRAPPIST-1
6 m
Article
Space
Share

Exoplanet TRAPPIST-1e May Be Just Right for Life

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 21, 2017
Tucked between a boiled-away desert and a giant snowball, an alien world called TRAPPIST-1e may be the only habitable planet in a newly discovered batch of seven, according to a new climate model.

Footer

About The Channel

The Channel

Contact Us

Ingenium
P.O. Box 9724, Station T
Ottawa ON K1G 5A3
Canada

613-991-3044
1-866-442-4416
contact@IngeniumCanada.org
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Channel

    • Channel Home
    • About the Channel
    • Content Partners
  • Visit

    • Online Resources for Science at Home
    • Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
    • Canada Aviation and Space Museum
    • Canada Science and Technology Museum
    • Ingenium Centre
  • Ingenium

    • Ingenium Home
    • About Ingenium
    • The Foundation
  • For Media

    • Newsroom
    • Awards

Connect with us

Subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest Ingenium news straight to your inbox!

Sign Up

Legal Bits

Ingenium Privacy Statement

© 2023 Ingenium

Symbol of the Government of Canada
  • Browse
    • Categories
    • Media Types
    • Boards
    • Featured Stories
  • About
    • About The Channel
    • Content Partners