NASA Promotes Howard Hu to Lead Orion Ahead of First Artemis Mission | NASA
NASA works to maintain Russian cooperation in space while eyeing 'operational flexibility' | Space
NASA is continuing to operate the International Space Station (ISS) as usual alongside Russia and the agency's other partners, but is weighing its options for the future amid Russia's ongoing invasion in Ukraine, the agency's top space operations official said Monday (Feb. 28).
NASA, ULA Launch NOAA's Newest Earth Observing Satellite | NASA
NASA auditor warns Congress: Artemis missions, SLS rocket billions over budget
NASA's auditor didn't mince words when he told lawmakers Tuesday that the space agency's lunar program is going to cost a ton more per mission than initial projections suggested a decade ago.
"We found that the first four Artemis missions will each cost $4.1 billion per launch, a price tag that strikes us as unsustainable," NASA Inspector General Paul Martin said during a meeting of the House Subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics.
WATCH: House hearing reviews NASA’s planned mission to Mars | PBS NewsHour
The House Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee held an online status update and review of NASA’s Artemis Initiative on Tuesday.
The agency said after a meeting of officials from its 22 member states that it was assessing the consequences of sanctions for its cooperation with Russia's Roscosmos space agency.
NASA Lunar Programs: Moon Landing Plans Are Advancing but Challenges Remain | U.S. GAO
NASA plans to conduct a lunar landing mission, known as the Artemis III mission, no earlier than in 2025. This is a delay of at least a year from earlier plans.
While NASA has made progress on preparing for Artemis III (including planning its first test flight), we testified about challenges it faces in meeting its goal.
NASA extends SpaceX's Commercial Crew contract by three missions for $900 million – TechCrunch
NASA announced today that it has officially awarded SpaceX the Crew-7, Crew-8 and Crew-9 missions to the International Space Station, bringing SpaceX's total Commercial Crew Transportation Capability (CCtCap) contract to $3.49 billion.
The original $2.6 billion contract was issued to SpaceX in 2014 for the development of American crewed launch capabilities, which had ended in 2011 with the retirement of the Space Shuttle.
What an illuminating discovery. Astronomers with @NASA's NuSTAR X-ray space observatory are using previously unwant… https://t.co/P6yLrEDnvq NASAJPL (from Pasadena, Calif.) Tue Mar 01 19:31:32 +0000 2022
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