It was a wild year for NASA, and the space agency has the pictures to prove it.
This year, we saw new Moon suits, megarocket blastoffs, and a mysterious beached object. Oh, and an ultraviolet Mars.
The space agency is investigating a backup radiator on the Russian module that sprung a leak earlier this week.
This is the third coolant leak from Russia's hardware in Earth orbit within a year, but astronauts on board remain safe and out of immediate danger.
Philosopher Bernard Williams said September tries its best to have us forget summer, but these spaceflight images from the past month point us to the future.
Frank Rubio spent 371 days in low Earth orbit, breaking the record for the longest U.S. space mission.
It's a rare admission for a NASA astronaut, who typically remain sanguine when forced to work beyond the call of duty.
The three members of Expedition 70 are set to relieve astronauts who had been stranded on the space station for an additional six months.
The astronaut was stranded on board the ISS after a Russian Soyuz spacecraft suffered a coolant leak, setting the stage for a prolonged mission.
The Russian space agency had previously threatened to withhold access to Europe's robotic arm at the height of geopolitical tensions last year.
Eye-popping rocket launches, blazing hot reentries, and daring spacewalks, the month of May had plenty of spectacular visuals to offer.
The ISS was flying over Argentina at the time of the incident, leading some people to believe the interference was in fact a taxi driver from the country.
The action begins at 9:30 p.m. ET on Tuesday, with the spacewalk expected to last for 6 hours and 40 minutes.
We’re also looking forward to India’s launch of a Singaporean satellite and new details about NASA's plan for a crewed trip to Mars.
We’ll also be following a pair of important Falcon 9 launches from SpaceX, including the company’s seventh rideshare mission.
Launch of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-6 mission from Kennedy Space Center is now scheduled for no earlier than Thursday morning.
It’s also a big week for Japan, as the country’s space agency is set to launch its much-delayed H3 medium-lift rocket.
An extra seat will accommodate a NASA astronaut left stranded after a micrometeorite damaged a Russian Soyuz spacecraft last month.
The space agencies refuse to call it a “rescue mission,” in an obvious attempt to downplay the current risk posed to three stranded ISS crew members.
A Russian Soyuz spacecraft sprung a leak last month, jeopardizing three astronauts' ride back to Earth.