NASA is training humanity’s most powerful telescope on a “city-killing” asteroid to determine whether or not we need to brace for deep impact.
While this latest test doesn’t make nuclear-powered rocket engines viable just yet, it’s an important step on the journey.
That doesn’t mean, however, that interplanetary tech hasn’t found its way into your ride’s design. Even the humblest of daily ...
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis made headlines last month when he called for NASA headquarters to move to Kennedy Space Center ...
By drawing inspiration from space, businesses can embrace innovation with integrity, empower their workforce to adapt and ...
NASA’s Pandora mission nears launch, aiming to analyze exoplanet atmospheres for habitability clues. Using infrared ...
NASA’s acting administrator said in a Friday email to staff that employees should take an open-minded approach to SpaceX CEO ...
KANNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. — NASA crews are getting ready for its next moon mission. Engineers will test new technology ...
With funding from NASA, a Texas A&M University graduate student is working to better understand the environment of Mars ...
By April this year, scientists will start to decide whether to send a mission to intercept an asteroid that may hit Earth in ...
As such, the ISS operates on Coordinated Universal Time, UTC, also known as Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). This puts NASA ...