The European Gaia mission scans the sky from its parking spot 930,000 miles away from Earth.

The Gaia mission creates the most precise 3D map of the Milky Way galaxy. (Image credit: ESA/Gaia/DPAC)

New data from the European Space Agency's Gaia mission will be released on June 13. The latest updates from the telescope can be found here.

The media will be briefed at 4 a.m. on Monday, June 13th. The sun rises at 0800GMT. The highlights from the new data catalog will be shared by the experts. The media briefing will be broadcasted on the web.

The mission of the company is to create the most accurate and complete map of the universe. Calculating the precise positions of stars, their distances from Earth and the speeds at which they travel has been made easier by the data collected by the Gaia spacecraft. As objects in the universe follow the rules of physics, astronomer were able to use the data to model stellar trajectory into the distant past and learn about what happened in the early years.

The next Gaia mission data dump could solve some big mysteries.

New, previously unavailable information will be contained in the June 13 data release.

This will be the third data dump from Gaia, following data sets in 2016 and 2018? The data was collected over a three year period.

The largest collection of astrophysical data for stars in the Milky Way will be included in the new data set. The data set of chemical compositions of asteroids in the solar system will be included in the catalog. The first space-based all-sky survey of quasars, which are super bright objects at the center of some galaxies, was conducted by Gaia.

Several studies will be published on June 13 and will be highlighted in the media briefings. The great potential of the new data was highlighted in the papers.

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