The Sun is currently wedged between Earth and Mars, posing a risk of garbling the commands sent by NASA to its Martian fleet.
Narrowing down the location of buried ice on Mars could help the space agency decided where to land its astronauts on future missions.
The space agency formed a response team following the release of a scathing report in late September.
The NASA-funded mission will launch two twin spacecraft to explore Mars' magnetosphere and how it interacts with solar wind.
NASA's complex plan to return rocky samples from the Red Planet has faced scrutiny for increasing cost and delays.
Generative AI art was used to create illustrations for its upcoming expansion, and it sounds like the developer is all-in on using it for its future output.
Scientists estimate just two dozen pleasant people could be the minimum number of astronauts it could take to build an otherworldly residence.
The Mars Ascent Vehicle will bring back samples from the Red Planet that are currently being collected by the Perseverance rover.
Previously, the Ingenuity helicopter ended its 53rd flight early due to an apparent glitch with its navigation camera.
The six-wheeled Perseverance explorer just packed its 20th sample from the Red Planet, which will hopefully be returned to Earth via a future mission.
Mars may have witnessed a major shift in climate thousands of years ago, marking the end of the planet’s most recent ice age.
The intrepid rover found a donut-shaped rock that may be a meteorite which landed on Mars.
NASA's Mars habitat was created to prepare crews for the physical and mental challenges of living on another planet.
The red planet donned a new color when captured in ultraviolet wavelengths.
Rain in Spain caused a disruption during last week's transmission, in which Europe's Mars Express Orbiter beamed images to Earth in rapid succession.
Now 20 years since its launch, the European Space Agency’s Mars Express orbiter has a new Martian map.
The European Space Agency will livestream an hour of Martian imagery from its orbiter, allowing us to see Mars like never before.
Impulse Space and Relativity Space are vying to become the first commercial enterprise to land on the Red Planet, but delays have pushed the anticipated launch.
The set will touch down on June 1 for $100, which is $2,699,999,900 less than what NASA paid for the real thing.
Hydrated dunes suggest water can persist on some parts of the Martian surface, according to data from China's troubled Zhurong rover.