ESA’s Waste to Orbit Project: Turning 5-10 Kilos of Industrial Waste Weekly into Bio-Sourced Satellite Materials
Rahul Somvanshi
Rahul Somvanshi
An orange peel on Earth today, a component of a satellite tomorrow—discover how ESA’s innovative use of waste is transforming space travel.
Photo Source : ESA
ESA’s new project sees everyday waste like fruit peels turning into high-performance materials for satellites; find out how.
Photo Source : ESA
Researchers at Cote D’Azur University, in collaboration with ESA, are pushing the boundaries of materials science using sustainable resources.
Photo Source : ESA
Imagine materials strong enough for space yet sourced entirely from Earth’s waste—ESA’s latest endeavor does just that.
Photo Source : ESA
How are industrial leftovers shaping the future of aerospace? ESA’s breakthrough in bio-sourced composites might just hold the key
Photo Source : ESA
From the lab to the stars: ESA’s journey of turning 5 to 10 kilos of weekly waste into viable space materials is scaling up
Photo Source : ESA
From the lab to the stars: ESA’s journey of turning 5 to 10 kilos of weekly waste into viable space materials is scaling up
Photo Source : ESA
What could your next beach vacation and space travel have in common? ESA is turning algae into materials for Mars missions
Photo Source : ESA
Scaling up to 100 kilos of bio-sourced materials per week, ESA eyes the potential for commercial applications in space.
Photo Source : ESA
More Stories
Learn more