The space agency is preparing to return humans to the lunar surface for the first time in more than 50 years.
Elon Musk is opening a nostalgia-laden, retro-futuristic drive-in movie theater for Tesla owners. How imaginary is the past—and future—he’s basing it on?
The spacewalk is taking place despite ongoing tensions between the European Space Agency and Russia.
The potential move offers a way for the European Space Agency to move forward, while driving Russia even further into the background.
Experts say the increasing frequency of solar storms—the result of the Sun's 11-year cycle—is catching smallsat firms off guard.
The head of U.S. Space Command condemned the launch of the Russian satellite, describing the move as "irresponsible."
The agency is bringing together experts to build tools that seek to standardize communication between tens of thousands of satellites.
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 space junk was created in November 2021 when Russia used a missile to deliberately destroy a defunct satellite.
An earlier test of the same booster in July resulted in a giant fireball that sent the prototype back to the factory for repairs.
While U.S. officials are reportedly concerned about military spying, Iran says its latest and most sophisticated satellite will gather environmental data.
The local tourism office says more than 100,000 spectators are likely to hunker down near Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The unusually busy day, in which rocket after rocket reached the final frontier, highlights the frenetic pace at which we're now venturing into space.
The rising number of satellites in Earth orbit means astronomers are having to contend with increasingly cluttered skies. New research could help.
The Falcon 9 rocket is scheduled to lift off on Thursday at 7:08 p.m. ET and attempt the company's first trans-lunar injection.
The incident is another reminder that regularly falling space junk is poised to become the new normal.
There’s a slim but nonzero chance that debris from the 25-ton core stage will land on inhabited areas.
The company sent 46 Starlink satellites to low Earth orbit on a Falcon 9 rocket late last week.
It’s too early to know when or where the rocket core stage might crash, but it could happen within a week.
Students in Switzerland will use the prototype habitat to explore architectural solutions to the challenges of living on another planet.