If the question is what the European Orion module is doing among giant speakers, the answer is NASA’s extreme tests

When we talk about Artemis We almost always look in the same place: NASA, the SLS rocketthe Orion capsule and that plan to return astronauts to the surface of the Moon. It makes sense, because the United States leads the program and a good part of the space imagination continues to revolve around its missions. But that reading falls short. Artemis is not just an American story.It is also an international architectureand in that architecture Europe has a much more important piece than it usually seems at first glance. That role has just been realized in a very visible milestone. Airbus Space recently announced that ESM-3, Orion’s third European Service Module and the unit destined for Artemis III, had its four solar wings installed. It is a powerful image because it summarizes well the nature of the project: an American ship with an essential part developed on the other side of the Atlantic. The module, built by the aerospace giant for the European Space Agency, will use those wings to provide electrical power to Orion during its mission, although there is still work to be done before the assembly can be considered ready to fly. The ESM has a much deeper function than a picture of newly installed solar panels may suggest. In the Orion architecture, this module is placed under the capsule where the astronauts travel and concentrates systems that are essential for the mission. NASA explains that provides electricity, propulsion, thermal control, air and waterin addition to serving as support to the ship during flight. That is why its role is not understood as a symbolic contribution, but as an operational part of the vehicle. A test on the ground, between speakers and noise The following, however, was not one of those scenes that we immediately associate with space. Airbus Space noted on May 6 that the next step was an acoustic test, a ground test designed to see how the spacecraft responds to the extreme launch environment. Simply put: before thinking about docking, orbits or manned missions, the module had to deal with the noise and vibrations that occur when the rocket takes off. That trial has already begun to materialize. NASA has shown the Orion service module for Artemis III during its acoustic tests at the Kennedy Space Center, surrounded by a wall of high-powered speakers to simulate the sound and vibrations of launch. According to the center, these tests help measure how the structure responds, verify the physical integrity of the spacecraft, protect sensitive avionics and propulsion interfaces, and detect potential problems on the ground well before launch day. This type of test is known as direct field acoustic testor D-FAT, and involves surrounding space hardware with an array of high-power speakers to reproduce the acoustic environment of launch. In equivalent testing of the Orion European Service Module, ESA has spoken of more than 200 speakers and more than 140 decibels. It’s not a new rarity: NASA already submitted Apollo vehicles underwent vibroacoustic testing in the 1960s to see how their structures and systems responded to the noise and vibrations expected during flight. That this test has arrived now does not make the module a ready-to-fly piece, but it does mark another advance in Orion’s preparation for Artemis III. And there the context matters, because the mission in which this module must participate is no longer counted exactly the same as it was a few months ago. Artemis III was for a long time the mission associated with the return of astronauts to the lunar surface, but NASA has rearranged the calendar and now places it as a demonstration mission in low Earth orbit. The plan involves launching four astronauts in Orion, on the SLS, to rehearse rendezvous and docking maneuvers with one or two commercial lunar landing vehicles from SpaceX and Blue Origin. It is not the end of the lunar goal, but an intermediate step to test an architecture that still needs to fit many pieces. The interest of this module is best understood precisely because of this new role of Artemis III. If the mission will be used to verify docking and operations with commercial vehicles, Orion will have to act as a manned platform within a much broader test than a simple test flight. In this scenario, the ESM-3 is not a peripheral contribution, but rather an integrated part of the ship in which the astronauts will travel. Europe, therefore, does not appear only in the cooperation communications: it appears in the machinery that has to make the mission work. The paradox sums up the moment quite well. Europa has just completed a visible part of the preparation of the module that will travel with Orion, and its next test has not been on the Moon, not even in orbit, but among noise, vibrations and speakers within a test on the ground. That is also the reality of Artemis: large lunar objectives supported by a long succession of technical, industrial and often inconspicuous steps. In that chain, ESM-3 makes it clear that the return to the lunar surface is not being prepared only from the United States. Images | Airbus Space | POT In Xataka | The Earth has had a traveling companion for millions of years and we don’t know where it came from, but there is a ship ready to give us answers

If you buy it you get a camera module. This is the new offer in this mobile with great power and autonomy

Unlike what we saw a few years ago, Realme has taken a huge leap by betting on high-end mobile phones that, by all accounts, have managed to attract us both visually and technically. He Realme GT 8 Pro It arrived in stores just a few weeks ago and can now be purchased on Amazon for 899 euros. It is available in two colors: es and eye, because it comes with a charger and a camera module. Realme GT 8 Pro (12GB, 256GB) The price could vary. We earn commission from these links A mobile phone that can change the camera module At the design level the Realme GT 8 Pro It stands out above all for its camera module: It is quite large and can be exchanged with others sold by the brand. One comes by default, but when you buy it on Amazon the store gives you an additional one valued at 19.99 eurosthus allowing us to customize it. Beyond its design, the truth is that the Realme GT 8 Pro also manages to shine in power and autonomy. Regarding the first, it achieves this thanks to its processor Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 which comes, in this case, along with 12 GB of RAM and also has 256 GB of internal storage. The battery is well served thanks to its 7,000 mAh capacity. It also supports 120W fast charging and 50W wireless charging. In addition, its screen is excellent as it has a good 6.79-inch LTPO AMOLED panel that offers a QHD+ resolution and a 144 Hz refresh rate. You may also be interested realme Buds T200Lite True Wireless Bluetooth Headphones, 32dB Intelligent Active Noise Cancellation, 360° Spatial Sound, Autonomy up to 48 Hours, White The price could vary. We earn commission from these links realme Watch 5 Smart Watch for Women and Men, AMOLED 1.97″ Smartwatch, Bluetooth Calls, Independent GPS, 108+ Sports Modes, Health and Sleep Tracking/IP68/NFC, 14 Day Battery, Silver The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Some of the links in this article are affiliated and may provide a benefit to Xataka. In case of non-availability, offers may vary. Images | Amparo BabiloniRealme In Xataka | The best mobile phones (2025), we have tested them and here are their analyzes In Xataka | The best quality-price mobile phones (2025). Their analyzes and videos are here

It is having put the whole mobile in the camera module

Apple checked yesterday with the design of its iPhone Airand rightly. But not because of its extraordinary thinness, which many seems to us a wrong obsession, but for something very different: its camera module, which is actually much more than that. Why is it important. In that small Apple module has managed to encapsulate not only the camera sensor, but almost the entire circuitry of this iPhone. They have done it with an objective: that the rest is just what an ultradelgado mobile needs, which is, Logically, drums. A Plateau prodigious. Those responsible for the firm explain in the description of the iPhone Air how the new Plateau (“Plateau”), that camera module, houses the cameras, the speaker, and the Apple Silicon family chip. Taking into account the reduced dimensions of said module, the achievement is exceptional. The rise of the MAC Mini M1 in Ifixit showed that Apple had a lot of space in that chassis. I was sung that they would end up offering a more compact model, as we saw with the Mac Mini M4. The Mac Mini M1 taught us the future. The extreme miniaturization Achieved by Apple in its integrated circuits already astonished us With the launch of the Apple M1 in the Mac Mini M1. These teams retained the chassis of the traditional Mac Mini, but in reality they could have been much smaller because the motherboard was tiny. So much so that with the Mac Mini M4 we could finally verify how small these teams could be. In the case of the iPhone Air that achievement goes one step further. The iPhone Air points to the folding iPhone. This technical achievement makes us inevitably think that this type of module can also end up being the protagonist in the hypothetical folding iPhone of which We have been talking for years. Rumors are in fact that we will see this device in 2026, and although the format does not seem definitive, Apple seems to be turning towards a foldable shell type like the Z Flip5, and not one type Z fold that when deploying resembles an iPad Mini. Of course, any of these options remains feasible. Unstoppable evolution. Other “Desceces” of Ifixit Like that of the Vision Pro They demonstrate that Apple’s ability to integrate all components into almost impossible volumes, and that is what they have demonstrated generation after iPhone generation. The motherboards of these devices have been dwarfing until we reach that minimum expression that we have seen on the iPhone Air. Total control = total integration. In that achievement it has a lot to do with that vertical integration that Apple has achieved. The firm already controls practically all sections of manufacturing and in fact on the iPhone Air and the iPhone 17 debut New connectivity chips and decisions like Eliminate traditional SIM slots. All aimed at making thinner devices, yes, but also more efficient. But. That technical achievement is unquestionable, but once achieved, why obsess with thinness? Having great autonomy remains one of the most valued characteristics in these mobiles, but in Apple they seem to prioritize once again – as in the time of Jony Ive – the form on the function. The iPhone Air looks striking, without a doubt, But I didn’t need to be so thin. Even Apple itself seems to recognize it: to announce a Magsafe battery in the form of “backpack” specifically designed for this mobile. In Xataka | The iPhone Air is the new attempt to solve what has tormented Apple for years: the fourth iPhone syndrome

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