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Nasa has confirmed that the Artemis II Moon mission launch is now eyeing March 2026 following fuel system issues. Engineers are currently reviewing data from a recent confidence test at the Kennedy Space Center. |
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Nasa has confirmed that the Artemis II Moon mission launch is now eyeing March 2026 following fuel system issues. Engineers are currently reviewing data from a recent confidence test at the Kennedy Space Center. |
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NASA, during its latest test of the Artemis-2 mission, faced another glitch with a hydrogen loading issue ahead of its planned crewed Moon fly-by. |
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NASA's Artemis-2 mission continues to run into challenges. Engineers on Thursday faced a new hiccup during a test of the massive rocket that will carry four astronauts around the Moon for the first time in over 50 years. During the evaluation, the NASA team faced an "issue" with the ground support equipment as operators tried [...] |
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The Crew-12 mission will be carried out by a four-member crew who have undergone months of specialised training for their time in orbit. Nasa-SpaceX Crew-12 includes Commander Jessica Meir, Pilot Jack Hathaway, and Mission Specialists Sophie Adenot and Andrey Fedyaev. |
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Voyager 1 is transmitting data from 24 billion kilometres away using less than 200 watts of power. Discover how Nasa engineers maintain this 48-year-old spacecraft in interstellar space. |
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Preparations for the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics are moving ahead across the Italian Alps, where organisers are leaning heavily on existing ve. |
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Comets usually fade quietly once they swing past the Sun. Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS did not follow the same path. Instead, as it began to exit the s. |
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Launch timing has shifted again for NASA's Crew 12 mission, after poor weather along the ascent path ruled out an earlier attempt this week. Teams are. |
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1,000 light-years away in the constellation Cygnus, a sun-like star is reaching the closing chapter of its life. And it is not slipping away quietly. . |
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Solar activity during Solar Cycle 25 has superheated Earth's upper atmosphere, puffing it outward and accelerating Swift's descent from an initial 585 km to below 400 km altitude by early February. |