A recent Venus flyby pushed the spacecraft out of Earth's orbital plane, allowing it to gaze at the solar poles.
While some welcome the change, other experts warn that this move could make it even harder to access scientific information in Trump’s America.
Originally built to support the Apollo program, Space Launch Complex 37 will soon be converted to a Starship launch mount.
The orbital demonstration could be a game-changer for extending the lifespan of satellites in space.
Asteroid 2024 YR4, which previously posed the highest impact risk to Earth ever recorded, has now been assessed a slightly higher chance of slamming into the Moon in seven years.
The Ax-4 mission is scheduled to launch from NASA's Kennedy Space Center at 8:22 a.m. ET on Tuesday, June 10. You can catch the action live right here.
One of Mars' tallest volcanoes peeps over a thick layer of clouds, in Odyssey’s first picture of Arsia Mons peering over the Red Planet's horizon.
How a robot built to walk on alien ice got the cold shoulder—and then (possibly) lived to see another day.
The unusual astronomical skirmish offers new insight into the dynamics of such collisions.
The SpaceX CEO threatened to pull his Dragon spacecraft, flaunting an incredible amount of leverage.
The Resilience lander was carrying a tiny rover, a miniature Swedish cottage, and several science payloads when it crashed onto the lunar surface.
The fallen NASA administrator nominee was clearly not a fan of the agency's plan to return astronauts to the Moon.
The agency is facing budgetary constraints that might affect operations aboard the ISS.
Extreme nuclear transients are 10 million times rarer than supernovae and emit the same amount of energy as 100 Suns.
With 3.2 billion pixels and a decade-long search, the Rubin Observatory will reveal what’s been hiding in plain sight.
The Resilience lander is set for touchdown on Thursday at 3:24 p.m. ET.
The latest incident raises concern that Russia is developing anti-satellite weapons.
The lightless behemoths are explored in new simulations of their interactions with extremely dense stars.
It sort of looks like a honeycomb of hot gas, or a hazelnut croquant.
The findings suggest black holes could provide a cheaper, natural alternative to billion-dollar particle colliders, if we can figure out how to harness them.