Czech scientists planning to create map of resources in space
The Czech Republic’s National Space Plan has got its first ambitious project from the ESA. The “Space Laboratory for Advanced Variable Instruments and Applications”, or SLAVIA as the project is cleverly abbreviated, will serve as a demonstration of selected technologies that could be used in the future for prospecting raw materials on the moon as well as on asteroids.

According to Petr Kapoun, the CEO of the Brno-based company S.A.B. Aerospace which leads the consortium of companies in negotiations related to SLAVIA, this could be a big help in an area of industry that has caught the attention of many rich investors in recent years.
“Within a few years, we would like to create a map of resources in space, so that, when we do go mining there one day, we will already know exactly where to go.”
SLAVIA counts on using two 20-kilograms satellites that will each carry three devices designated for exploring asteroid fragments and interplanetary matter entering the Earth atmosphere. They include a so-called hyperspectral camera that will analyse the composition of near Earth meteoroids and asteroids when they enter the planet’s atmosphere, as well as a mass spectrometer that will analyse the separated particles directly in orbit. Finally, in order to understand better how such space debris behaves, the satellites are also carrying a radio antenna to monitor plasma.
The measurements will take place 600km above the earth’s surface and therefore provide much more accurate results than if they were to be conducted by scientists on the ground, says Martin Ferus from the Heyrovský Institute of Physical Chemistry at the Czech Academy of Sciences. Read More…