The 230-foot-tall rocket flew for the first time since 2019, delivering a classified payload for the U.S. Space Force.
It's still too early to tell where the Long March 5B core stage might fall, but estimates will improve in the coming hours.
70% of Musk's followers in an informal poll said he should bring back Vine.
The space agency is targeting a launch date in October 2023 for its asteroid mission.
The Falcon Heavy, currently the most powerful rocket in the world, blasted off on Tuesday at 9:41 a.m. ET.
The space agency had previously ruled out a crewed landing for Artemis 4, citing the complexity of the lunar mission.
Launching next month, the space agency's Lunar Flashlight will search for water ice hiding in permanently shadowed craters on the Moon's south pole.
From dictators to the company's workers—many took to the platform to discuss the platform amid the site's ownership transition.
To keep its FCC license, the company must launch half of its 3,236 Project Kuiper satellites by 2026.
A senior Russian official said commercial satellites, if used to aid the Ukrainian war effort, could become “legitimate targets,” prompting the U.S. response.
Women have come so far in the male-dominated field, but there's still more work to be done.
Twitter's top lawyer was reportedly escorted from the company's headquarters Thursday.
Boeing slipped down on NASA’s vendor list and Starliner has now cost it nearly $900 million, making for a double-whammy of developments.
The billionaire has said he'll finalize his acquisition of the social media company before the end of the week, and the court-imposed deadline.
LEO, GEO, L2, SSO—oh my! The many types of useful orbits can get complicated fast, but our handy guide will help you make sense of it all.
The billionaire carried a sink into Twitter HQ on Wednesday, a reference to the Twitter cliche "let that sink in."
OneWeb cancelled launches aboard Russia's Soyuz rocket following the country's invasion of Ukraine.
Russia won't be providing ESA with a lander for its Mars rover, so the space agency wants to build one itself and acquire the needed funds to make it happen.
A strand of hair briefly disrupted the recent SpaceX Crew-5 launch, showcasing the perils posed by even the most innocuous of objects.
SpaceX didn't want to cooperate, so the researchers had to figure things out the hard way.