To boldly go where no Dutch university has gone before. This year, Delft University will add a third satellite to its CV, to be operated and controlled from the roof of the EWI building. Although this pocketcube has an astonishingly small size of 15 x 5 x 5 cubic centimetres, it will still house multiple instruments.
Better still, after winning a European Space Agency competition, TU Delft may be offered the opportunity to launch a satellite to the dark side of the moon. After being dropped in lunar orbit, it will have to manoeuvre to a position 60,000 kilometres beyond the moon, all by itself. There, it will study meteorite impacts that may help future lunar exploration by robots or humans.
Here you can read more about the TU Delft expanding into space.