NASA will try its Artemis II launch
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Trump’s NASA chief says the US will build a base on the moon
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has committed the United States to building permanent infrastructure on the lunar surface, backing that pledge with a new federal partnership to develop nuclear power on the Moon by the end of the decade.
A 1,300-pound NASA satellite is expected to crash through Earth's atmosphere March 10, 2026, with some of the spacecraft possibly surviving re-entry.
But the big picture here is that the US Senate has put out one of its most important pieces of spaceflight legislation in decades: Senators have instructed Isaacman to go fly the Artemis program with all due speed, to do so as he deems best, and to focus on building a Moon base rather than a space station in lunar orbit.
The Van Allen probe, which studied how the Earth is protected from harmful space radiation, could fall to Earth tonight. Here’s what to know
Will Ohio see the NASA satellite crash? What we know as Van Allen Probe A is expected to reenter Earth on March 10 after 14 years in space.
NASA Force is launching to place top engineers into mission-critical roles, expanding the US Tech Force program to advance space exploration and technology priorities.
The University of Edinburgh’s Centre of Robotics has honed Valkyrie’s capabilities over the last 10 years.
NASA's Van Allen Probe A is falling to Earth much sooner than expected, though the spacecraft's reentry poses a low risk to humans.