Orion’s 25.5-day lunar journey sets the stage for humans to once again walk on the Moon.
The Artemis 1 spacecraft is returning from its historic trip to the Moon, with splashdown scheduled for Sunday, December 11 at 12:40 p.m. ET.
NASA’s Artemis 1 trek to the Moon is coming to a close, but for the capsule recovery team, its mission is just about to begin.
NASA, in addition to lauding its new megarocket, released a jaw-dropping supercut of the Artemis 1 launch.
The course correction maneuver occurred on Thursday afternoon, setting the stage for a second up-close lunar flyby.
It was a scary and unexpected 47 minutes, but NASA managed to restore communications with its uncrewed Artemis 1 capsule.
The most powerful operational rocket in the world blasted off last week, causing all sorts of damage to the launch pad. NASA officials don't seem to be worried.
Four of 10 cubesats that launched last week have experienced serious problems, with one failing outright and the remaining three likely doomed as well.
As expected, NASA lost contact with the spacecraft for 34 minutes as Orion passed behind the Moon.
NASA is targeting a two-hour launch window that opens at 1:04 a.m. ET on Wednesday, despite minor damage caused by Hurricane Nicole.
A critical tanking test on Wednesday could set the stage for the launch of Artemis 1 on September 27.
A third launch attempt of Artemis 1 could happen in late September, but that would require some serious hustle.
A hydrogen leak prevented the launch of NASA’s SLS rocket this Saturday, in what is a troubling yet highly predictable development.
The current SLS launch period is now off the table, which means the Artemis 1 mission won’t launch until October at the earliest.
NASA's return to the Moon is delayed yet again, after engineers failed to plug a hydrogen leak on the launch pad Saturday.
The two-hour launch window starts at 2:17 p.m. ET (6:17 p.m. UTC) on September 3. The rocket's Monday launch was scrubbed due to temperature sensor problems.
NASA is under tremendous pressure to launch its new megarocket—and it shows.
An engine that refused to cool down led to today’s scrub, delaying the much-anticipated inaugural launch of NASA’s SLS.
The maiden voyage of SLS is set for November 16, kicking off NASA's return to the Moon and setting the stage for crewed missions.
The launch of the SLS megarocket will kick off a series of missions in which NASA seeks to return humans to the Moon.