NASA Targets a Mar. Launch of Moon Rocket
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The same AI methods that power ChatGPT can now allow you to talk to the Moon Its good to be skeptical when applying
Space.com on MSNOpinion
From a new flagship space telescope to lunar exploration, global cooperation – and competition – will make 2026 an exciting year for space
Coming from one of the world's largest astrophysical research institutes, I can tell you, the anticipation across the global space science community is electric.
Artemis II is preparing for launch from the Kennedy Space Center, where the rocket will carry the Orion spacecraft for a second time, this time with a crew on its journey to the moon.
NASA is moving into a new phase of space exploration, with major progress across human spaceflight, science missions, and advanced technology. In just one year, the agency has launched multiple crewed and science missions,
NASA has been forced to delay its historic mission that would send astronauts to the Moon for the first time since 1972. This historic Artemis II mission was scheduled take place as soon as
NASA's Artemis II crewed mission to the moon shows how U.S. space strategy has changed since Apollo -- and contrasts with China's closed program.
A NASA video (above) reveals in great detail how its upcoming Artemis II mission is expected to play out. The space agency released the animation last year, but seeing that the Artemis II astronauts could be heading to the moon as early as February 6,
Stargazers can see six planets all in one evening during the second month of the year, especially Mercury, which is usually difficult to spot.
Exhaust from lunar landers drifts across the moon and contaminates ultra-cold polar craters that are rich in ancient ice and organic clues, a new study reports.
As NASA gears up to send four astronauts on a crewed flight around the moon in the imminent Artemis II mission, Axiom Space is carefully preparing its AxEMU spacesuit for the highly anticipated endeavor that will follow.
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Americans are going to the moon soon—before China | Opinion
Military dominance of space will almost certainly lead to military dominance on Earth.