NASA names Artemis III crew
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NASA's Swift Boost mission one step closer to launch as LINK spacecraft is joined with its rocket
LINK will rescue Swift from a premature atmospheric re-entry, allowing it to continue operations.
On June 9, NASA revealed the four astronauts of Artemis III, a crucial test flight ahead of the planned 2028 moon landing.
NASA has selected the Artemis III crew for a high-stakes 2027 mission designed to test the future of lunar exploration. Astronauts will launch aboard Orion and perform unprecedented docking operations with lunar landers being developed by both Blue Origin and SpaceX.
Rocket One, Inc. ("Rocket One" or the "Company"), a company focused on advanced computing technologies and next-generation infrastructure for the space economy, today announced the appointment of Colonel (Ret.
NASA’s Artemis program has little room for error if it is to land astronauts on the moon by the end of 2028, but Blue Origin could be out of commission for at least a year.
Commander Randy Bresnik and three others will attempt to dock with two different lunar landers in Earth orbit, paving the way for a future moon landing.
NASA's Reactive Additive Manufacturing for the Fourth Industrial Revolution (RAMFIRE) project test-fired a 3D-printed engine nozzle at Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama. See the test in real-time and slow motion here.
Futurism on MSN
Jeff Bezos’ Rocket Explodes Into Mushroom Cloud, Dealing Massive Blow to NASA’s Moon Plans
Bezos is calling it a "very rough day." The post Jeff Bezos’ Rocket Explodes Into Mushroom Cloud, Dealing Massive Blow to NASA’s Moon Plans appeared first on Futurism.
Rocket Lab appears to be planning the June 11 launch of its hypersonic HASTE spacecraft on a secretive government mission known as 'Curveball.'
The latest flight of the New Glenn rocket was meant to prepare Blue Origin for a series of NASA-funded lunar voyages. Instead it ended before it began
For as long as rockets have existed, motion in space has come with a brutal tradeoff. To move forward, you throw mass backward, and that means carrying huge amounts of fuel.
