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Here’s a recap of some of the key developments and capabilities from March that are shaping Australia’s space industry.
Future space missions are set to benefit from the Internet of Things technology Myriota currently delivers to empower critical sectors on Earth.
Australia is ready to make its mark as part of NASA’s history-defining Artemis Program.
In a field where the signals are faint and the questions are vast, Sarah learned a discipline that still guides her work – follow the evidence, test the story the data is telling, and translate complex results into something others can scrutinise and trust.
This Memorandum of Cooperation strengthen Australia and Japan's collaboration in the field of space ICT, especially space optical communications.
QuantX Labs launched an optical frequency comb to space — advancing its TEMPO.Space optical atomic clock. This technology is backed by an Australian Space Agency program.
As major partners for this year's event, the Australian Space Agency co-hosted two special events. The Australian Space Discovery Centre was also the official city-based viewing hub for this year's Challenge, live-streaming the event across each day.
NASA selects Intuitive Machines to carry Australia’s Roo‑ver to the lunar South Pole region in 2030.
Expressions of interest are now open for this national program will be delivered by Scitech and is powered by the Australian Space Agency to shape the imaginations and capabilities of the next generation.
Funding from the National Reconstruction Fund Corporation boosts Advanced Navigation's valuation to more than $1 billion.
Robert Goddard, assisted by his wife Esther, sent the first liquid-fuelled rocket aloft on 16 March 1926. Explore with our interactive image gallery how far the technology has come, since he lit the fuse on a tiny rocket 100 years ago!
When it launched in 2023, Spiral Blue’s compact and energy-efficient SE-1 became the most powerful edge computer ever used in space outside of a space station.
With temperatures ranging between hundreds of degrees on the Moon, the University of Melbourne is managing the temperature of Australia’s first lunar rover.
Join us at the Australian Space Discovery as we will live stream Adelaide University's 2026 Australian Rover Challenge and host a special hybrid event about Roo-ver.
Ending more than 25 months of pioneering operations in orbit, the novel nanosatellite was supported by Australian Space Agency with almost $7 million in grants.
Here’s a recap of some of the key developments and capabilities from February that are shaping Australia’s space industry.
Hypersonix’s DART AE completes its first flight, reaching hypersonic speeds greater than Mach 5 after launch from NASA’s Wallops Island in the US.
Rohan's career sits at that productive intersection: space technologies turned into everyday tools, and science practiced in partnership with Indigenous leadership — delivering environmental and climate benefits on a continental scale.
Funding is available for an Aussie payload to contribute to the mission that will tackle climate change.
Australian space technologies are supporting NASA's journey to the Moon for scientific discovery, economic benefits, and inspiration for a new generation of explorers.