Crew members aboard the International Space Station unpack newly delivered fresh fruit and other goodies in October 2019. (NASA) When astronauts come back down to Earth, it can take a moment to adjust ...
Astronauts grip objects too tightly in space because their brains are still anticipating Earth's gravity, a new study has ...
Members of Congress from both sides of the aisle objected to President Trump's proposed NASA budget cuts during a House ...
NASA will launch the Roman Space Telescope this September—8 months early—to map 12% of the sky and probe cosmic mysteries ...
An astronaut can hold a tool in space, loosen their fingers, and watch it stay put. Nothing drops. Nothing tugs downward. Yet ...
NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will be unveiled as the agency prepares to launch the observatory into the cosmos ...
SpaceX’s Starlink division confirmed yesterday that it lost contact with a satellite on Sunday and is trying to locate space debris that might have been produced by… whatever happened there. “LeoLabs ...
A new listing of the 50 most concerning pieces of space debris in low-Earth orbit is dominated by relics more than a quarter-century old, primarily dead rockets left to hurtle through space at the end ...
Scientists have long known many objects floating at the solar system's outer edges resemble snowmen, but the reasons why were never clear. Now, a student at Michigan State University has created the ...
The security of Low Earth Orbit and freedom of maneuver in space will increasingly rely upon artificial intelligence.
AI is spurring ever more data satellites in space. How humanity plans to deal with the clutter is still an open question.
India’s space programme has built a reputation for precision, efficiency, and steady progress over the decades. From ...