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Regulations to conduct space activities were set up on 21 December 1998
The Australian Space Discovery Centre invite all little-astronauts to join us in-centre for space storytime. Each session will begin with a reading of a space book followed by an activity before attendees are invited to explore the Space Gallery.
Join Dr Tom Grace, a Bureau of Meteorology Space Weather Forecaster, to discover what drives space weather, why it matters to us here on Earth, and how we can measure and predict it.
This event has sold out and no more tickets are currently available. Please email info@discover.space.gov.au to join the waitlist.
This event has sold out and no more tickets are currently available. Please email info@discover.space.gov.au to join the waitlist.
Flex your engineering creativity in this paper rocket design challenge! Participants will build, launch, and refine their rocket designs to discover how to fly as high and as accurately as possible.
Launches will be conducted outside. Sun protection is recommended.
This event has sold out and no more tickets are currently available. Please email info@discover.space.gov.au to join the waitlist.
This event has sold out and no more tickets are currently available. Please email info@discover.space.gov.au to join the waitlist.
Connect online with us to hear about exciting pathways to a career in the space sector.
From your classroom or your home, you can book into any of our digital sessions, each with a different Space Guest.
Information on this page is meant for teachers organising school excursions to the Discovery Centre.
Information on this page is meant for teachers organising school excursions to the Discovery Centre.
Plants are an important part of any human space habitat. They give us food, and they make us feel good. But what do plants need to be able to thrive off-Earth? How can we grow enough food for astronauts living in space, on the Moon, or even on Mars?
Roo-ver is the name of our history-making rover, but how much do you actually know about it?
'Australian companies are contributing to global space missions by being agile.'
The SpIRIT nanosatellite was launched aboard a SpaceX rocket and will fly in low Earth orbit for two years.
From stitching a raw chicken breast to hypobaric chamber training, it’s all in a day’s work for Australian astronaut candidate Katherine Bennell-Pegg.
Raytracer, a Brisbane-based team of hardware and software engineers, are creating revolutionary simulation technologies for challenging and remote environments on and off Earth.
After the devastating bushfire season of 2019-2020, the Australian Space Agency led the establishment of a Bushfire Earth Observation Taskforce.
Spiral Blue’s SE-1 edge computer analyses satellite data in space and sends the useful parts back to Earth.