The financially stricken company is returning a small group of its furloughed staff to work and may be on the verge of a $200 million investment deal.
The U.S. Space Force awarded a $1.6 million contract to an Arkisys-led commercial team to initially test the spacecraft-assembling technology on the ground.
Engineers at NASA's assembly facility have fully integrated all five major structures of the Space Launch System's core stage.
A relict glacier in a surprisingly warm part of the planet could have implications for habitability.
Under its tactically responsive space initiative, Space Force wants the capacity to launch satellites to orbit with just 24 hours notice.
The stage is now set for Hakuto-R to attempt a lunar landing in April and enter into the history books as the first private mission to accomplish the feat.
NASA's historic mission to deflect an asteroid kicked up voluminous debris into space.
The wheeled robotic vehicle, slated for launch next year, will investigate the Moon’s South Pole in advance of crewed missions.
The Richard Branson-founded company paused all operations and furloughed most of its staff last week.
Times are tough for some commercial launch providers, but Astra and Virgin Orbit's troubles aren't due to Silicon Valley Bank's failure.
Relativity Space’s third attempt to launch its methane-fueled 3D-printed rocket is among the many things we’ll be focusing on this week.
NASA's AIM mission spent 15 years studying the mesosphere before calling it quits due to battery issues.
NASA and the Department of Energy are collaborating on the ambitious lunar experiment, called LuSEE-Night.
The first rocket will carry 52 Starlink satellites, while the second Falcon 9 rocket will deliver a batch of telecommunication satellites.
The federal funding amounted to $3.5 million, with Rolls-Royce Holdings hoping to have the reactor ready for launch to the Moon by 2029.
Russia is refusing to return 36 OneWeb internet satellites following a sanctions-provoked fallout with the British company.
The 22-year-old Mars Odyssey recently showed signs of missing fuel, sparking an interplanetary mystery that required some clever scientific sleuthing.
Earth's "evil twin" turned out to be very different from our own planet.
We finally got to see the Artemis Moon suit yesterday, and there's a lot to unpack. We've got you covered.
Electron blasted off on Thursday at 6:38 p.m. ET from NASA’s Virginia facility.