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Justine Calma
A new satellite could help improve disaster response.

NASA and the Indian Space Research Organisation plan to launch the satellite on July 30th. The NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar) mission is supposed to track ice melt and land deformation, helping scientists better understand the impacts of flooding, earthquakes, and more.

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External Link
Justine Calma
NASA’s losing thousands of employees.

It’s bleeding senior-level talent with at least 2,145 employees taking buyouts, deferred resignations, and early retirement offers, Politico reports.

The Trump administration wants to cut thousands more jobs at NASA as part of its efforts to decimate the federal workforce. The Supreme Court just issued a decision yesterday that allows Trump to move forward with mass layoffs while a lawsuit challenging that plan plays out in lower courts.

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Richard Lawler
Trump’s spending bill includes $85 million to move a Space Shuttle.

The H.R.1 spending bill Trump signed Friday that expands mass deportations, cuts social services, and stalls clean energy projects also includes a requirement for a “Space Vehicle Transfer.”

The target is Space Shuttle Discovery, which Texas senators are attempting to snatch from the Smithsonian. The Smithsonian estimates moving it could cost more than $300 million, and there’s the small detail that the modified Boeing 747 used to transport the shuttles is no longer available.

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Richard Lawler
Trump-Musk update.

An update on how the extremely public political breakup is going today, as protestors face off with federal immigration agents in Los Angeles.

  • Elon Musk deleted his tweet claiming Donald Trump prevented the release of Jeffrey Epstein files because he’s in them.
  • Trump told NBC News the Epstein links were “old news,” that he had no desire to repair their relationship, and when asked if it’s over, said, “I would assume so, yeah.”
  • The Washington Post cites a source claiming Trump referred to Elon as “a big-time drug addict” on a phone call.
  • A YouGov poll of 3,812 US adults found 41 percent of respondents supported the federal government ending Musk’s subsidies and contracts.
  • NASA and Pentagon officials reportedly urged competitors to develop SpaceX alternatives after Musk’s “terrifying” threat to decommission the Dragon spacecraft.
SpaceX rockets keep exploding. Is that normal?

Can a move-fast-and-break-things approach create the next-gen rocket?

Georgina TorbetCommentsComment Icon Bubble
The pursuit of better drugs through orbital space crystals

No, not those sorts of drugs, the kinds that could save your life.

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Andrew Liszewski
Lego’s new Space Shuttle set piggybacks aboard a Boeing 747.

It’s slightly smaller than the 2,354-piece Discovery set that debuted in 2021, but Lego’s new Space Shuttle Enterprise is part of a larger 2,417-piece set that includes a buildable replica of the Boeing 747 that NASA used for testing and moving its shuttles around the country.

The $229.99 Lego Icons Shuttle Carrier Aircraft will be available for purchase starting on May 15th for Lego Insiders, and May 18th for everyone else.

<em>The Space Shuttle Enterprise debuted in 1976 and was used by NASA to perform atmospheric test flights after being launched from atop a specially modified Boeing 747. It lacked engines and a heat shield, so like Lego’s replica, it’s not capable of spaceflight.</em>
<em>The set is 25 inches while the buildable Boeing 747 has a 21-inch wingspan.</em>
<em>Turning a dial on the underside of the 747 raises and lowers the model’s 18-wheel front and rear landing gear.</em>
<em>The Space Shuttle Enterprise can be detached from the 747 and also features retractable landing gear.</em>
<em>An included buildable display base includes details about Enterprise and the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft N905NA.</em>
<em>A look at the Lego Icons Shuttle Carrier Aircraft’s packaging.</em>
<em>A look at the back of the Lego Icons Shuttle Carrier Aircraft’s packaging revealing more details about both models</em>
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The Space Shuttle Enterprise debuted in 1976 and was used by NASA to perform atmospheric test flights after being launched from atop a specially modified Boeing 747. It lacked engines and a heat shield, so like Lego’s replica, it’s not capable of spaceflight.
Image: Lego
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Justine Calma
NASA tests out 3D wind profiling to improve weather forecasts.

It’s gathering “extremely precise” wind measurements using an instrument that sends out 200 laser pulses per second from an aircraft. By documenting how those pulses bounce off aerosol particles, NASA’s able to create 3D profiles showing wind speed and direction.

The hope is that this can make up for a dearth in data on winds above the surface of the Earth, which could lead to more accurate storm forecasts.

This visualization shows wind measurements gathered on Oct. 15, 2024, as NASA’s G-III aircraft flew along the East Coast of the U.S. and across the Great Lakes region.
This visualization shows wind measurements gathered on Oct. 15, 2024, as NASA’s G-III aircraft flew along the East Coast of the U.S. and across the Great Lakes region.
Visualization: NASA
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Youtube
Dominic Preston
Is Elon Musk in the room with us now?

Trump’s pick to lead NASA, Jared Isaacman, found it strangely difficult to tell his Senate confirmation hearing whether Elon Musk was part of his job interview or not. That’s odd, because he must have met Musk — Isaacman funded, and flew on, two private spaceflights using Musk’s SpaceX craft.

Isaacman says Mars will be NASA’s new priority if he’s in charge. Strangely enough, that’s where SpaceX is putting its money too.

Space science is under threat from the anti-DEI purge

The Trump administration’s attacks on diversity could lead to more accidents in space missions, experts say.

Georgina TorbetCommentsComment Icon Bubble
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Richard Lawler
SpaceX Crew-9 and the Boeing Starliner astronauts have landed safely.

Right on schedule, the Dragon capsule deployed its parachutes and landed off the coast of Florida as recovery crews began the process of bringing the capsule onboard a recovery ship and extracting its crew.

Dragon spacecraft floating in the ocean with speedboats approaching.
Image: NASA (YouTube)
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Richard Lawler
The Crew-9 return mission has completed its deorbit burn.

The Dragon spacecraft is fewer than 20 minutes out from splashdown in Florida. As noted on NASA’s livestream, it has completed the deorbit burn that lasted about seven and a half minutes at 5:18PM ET, and is entering a period of communications blackout as they reenter Earth’s atmosphere.

Its drogue parachutes will deploy four minutes before splashdown, beginning the process of slowing it down from 350 miles per hour before its targeted landing at about 5:57PM ET.

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Youtube
Richard Lawler
The Starliner astronauts are on their way back to Earth.

Last night, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, along with Crew-9 members Aleksandr Gorbunov and Nick Hague, left the ISS in a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft now that the Crew-10 mission has arrived to relieve them. NASA will resume coverage of their return mission this afternoon, as they are expected to splash down off the coast of Florida at about 5:57PM ET, ending a voyage that started last June.

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Wes Davis
Watch NASA’s Starliner astronauts greet the Crew-10 mission that will relieve them.

Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams will soon return to Earth — following an unexpectedly long stay in space due to issues with Boeing’s Starliner craft — after the Crew-10 mission’s SpaceX Dragon capsule docked with the International Space Station early this morning.

Here, in a video shared by NASA, the newcomers are greeted by the ISS crew. NASA said Friday that Wilmore, Williams, and two others “will return to Earth no earlier than Wednesday, March 19.”

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Marina Galperina
SpaceX Crew-10 has launched.

SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket lifted off on schedule in its second attempt Friday night, sending the Crew-10 mission on its way to the International Space Station.

Image: NASA (YouTube)
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External Link
Justine Calma
NASA’s chief scientist is out.

The agency is axing the Office of the Chief Scientist and the the Office of Technology, Policy and Strategy.

NASA contributes significantly to research on climate, weather, air quality, and the environment. Joe Biden appointed chief scientist Katherine Calvin, who was recently stopped from joining a meeting of the United Nations’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Science reports.

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Youtube
Jess Weatherbed
Blue Ghost’s lunar landing has real Apollo vibes.

The footage is so crisp that it almost looks like CGI. Check out the incredible shot of the Firefly Aerospace lander’s shadow coming back into focus after the Moon dust settles.

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Elizabeth Lopatto
Wernher Von Braun cosplayer calls actual astronaut a slur.

Elon Musk, the US’s would-be dictator, isn’t content with lying about the Boeing Starliner astronauts, who unexpectedly spent much longer in space than they planned after the Boeing craft had thruster failures. When Andreas Morgensen, a Danish astronaut, called the lies what they were, Musk replied with offensive name-calling.

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Justine Calma
NASA’s climate website is ‘moving.’

It’s “going to look a little different” as it migrates to a more general science site, according to NASA. President Donald Trump has called climate change a “hoax,” and researchers have been archiving environmental data in case it starts to disappear from federal websites.

The Biden administration’s climate and economic justice screening tool, a federal website on reproductive rights, and NASA’s diversity and inclusion pages appear to be down.

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Andrew Liszewski
Swapping big camera lenses is easy when you’re not fighting gravity.

NASA astronaut Don Pettit, who has taken some of the best photos of the stars and Earth ever captured aboard the International Space Station, recently shared a video on X highlighting how easy it is to juggle and swap big camera lenses in zero gravity. Keeping dust out of lenses is still an issue, but accidentally dropping one is not.

NASA astronaut Don Pettit changes camera lenses in zero gravity aboard the International Space Station.
Juggling thousands of dollars worth of camera lenses seems a lot less stressful and complicated aboard the International Space Station, as NASA astronaut Don Pettit recently demonstrated.
GIF: Don Pettit / X
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Andrew Liszewski
NASA’s Apollo missions inspired this $800 calculator watch.

A British startup has miniaturized the interfaces Apollo astronauts used aboard the command and lunar modules to create the DSKY Moonwatch. In addition to basic calculator functions the watch has GPS waypoint navigation and a battery good for 24 hours of use between charges with a USB cable.

You can preorder it now for £649 (around $814) and delivery is expected sometime in Q1 of 2025.

The Apollo Instruments DSKY Moonwatch against an image of the moon’s surface.
The Apollo Instruments DSKY Moonwatch against an image of the moon’s surface and a person pressing its buttons.
The Apollo Instruments DSKY Moonwatch worn on a person’s wrist.
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The DSKY Moonwatch’s design is inspired by the Apollo guidance computers.
Image: Apollo Instruments
The end of the ISS will usher in a more commercialized future in space

Can privately owned space stations replace the ISS? And what becomes of the research?

Georgina TorbetCommentsComment Icon Bubble