Luxembourg’s defense department wants to evaluate Virgin Orbit’s LauncherOne system as a means for “strengthening” NATO and other allies.
The Geotail mission launched in 1992 to study Earth's magnetosphere, but the satellite's future is now in doubt.
The space agency intentionally moved an asteroid last month, but the DART experiment is producing some unexpected side-effects.
At this rate, the infrared space observatory is going to need a vacation.
The Elon Musk-led company was hit with an $18,475 fine for the incident, in a troubling case that remains open.
The heavy-lift launch vehicle was originally slated for a 2020 liftoff, but the project has suffered from numerous delays.
The posters feature dark matter, a galactic graveyard, and more frights of the universe.
The space agency paused extravehicular activities earlier this year following a frightening incident in which an astronaut's helmet filled with water.
Russia’s state space corporation claims Oleg Artemyev, who recently returned to Earth after spending 195 days in orbit, wasn’t drunk when he hit a colleague.
The famous clouds of gas and dust are dazzling in the state-of-the-art instrument’s eye.
ESA's Euclid telescope was supposed to launch earlier this year on a Soyuz rocket, but Russian aggression is forcing the space agency to look elsewhere.
The newly arrived Expedition 68 crew is settling in and getting down to work inside the space lab.
NASA flew 135 Space Shuttle missions—none of which would've been possible without a lone prototype that piggybacked on top of jumbo jets.
OSIRIS-REx is scheduled to drop off samples of asteroid Bennu's surface in less than a year.
Companies say it's not clear which government agency should oversee commercial space stations.
Telescopes picked up an absolutely massive outburst of gamma rays on the morning of October 9.
The space agency has prepared two maneuvers to prevent the spacecraft from colliding with a satellite inside the most crowded region of Earth's orbit.
The famous radio telescope dramatically crumbled in December 2020, and now we know what comes next.
NASA crashed a spacecraft into an asteroid last month. It took some astronomical know-how to confirm the redirection test was a success.
The company will no longer be using ABL Space Systems to launch its Kuiper-1 and Kuiper-2 satellites and will instead use ULA's Vulcan Centaur rocket.