NASA’s Artemis program to return humans to the lunar surface is moving at a snail’s pace. Here’s why.
We’ll also be watching the launch of NASA’s hurricane-sniffing TROPICS satellites.
JUICE is having some difficulties deploying one of its most crucial science instruments—a tool for scanning the subsurfaces of Jupiter's icy moons.
Starship's explosion last week is "not a big downer," according to NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, who expects SpaceX to fly its megarocket again in two months.
Hydrated dunes suggest water can persist on some parts of the Martian surface, according to data from China's troubled Zhurong rover.
The triple-core rocket blasted off on Sunday evening to deliver three satellites to a high Earth orbit.
Russia had previously threatened to leave the ISS by 2024, but is now the last of NASA's partners to agree to stay aboard the station for a few more years.
On Friday morning, Al Neyadi and his NASA crewmate Stephen Bowen will attempt to retrieve an antenna outside the ISS that will be returned back to Earth.
The company won't be able to salvage any of the three boosters, as the giant rocket is on a mission to send its payloads directly to a high Earth orbit.
The recently-launched JUICE mission is on an eight year journey to Jupiter to explore its icy moons, which the spacecraft will study for signs of habitability.
Researchers said they could access an imaging satellite’s control interface, letting them manipulate its systems and introduce malicious code.
The space agency is hoping that future astronauts can use this technology for longterm habitation on the Moon as part of its Artemis program.
Virgin Orbit may be dead, but Richard Branson's other space venture is getting closer to resuming its commercial space tourism services.
The interstellar traveler is gradually losing power, but a clever tweak means it can continue running all of its scientific instruments.
The research rocket took a longer trajectory than intended and accidentally ended up in the neighboring country.
Tokyo-based ispace has not been able to reestablish communications with its M1 lander since performing a landing attempt yesterday.
A higher-resolution view is helping scientists understand the physics behind the strangest objects in the universe.
The origins of these powerful objects have been a mystery since their discovery in the 1950s.
New observations of the rock show its comet-like tail is not made of dust, possibly altering the origin story of the Geminid meteor shower.
A team of scientists is arguing that space sex could happen within the next decade and that the space tourism industry needs to be ready for it.