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Nasa Archive

Archives for November 2022

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
A simple plan.

NASA and the European Space Agency are developing a plan to bring interplanetary rock samples — already collected by the Perseverance rover — from Mars back to Earth by 2033.

Watch as Lizzie Philip explains the plan, as it exists so far, for the Mars Sample Return Mission.

Mary Beth Griggs
Mary Beth Griggs
NASA just released the full report of its investigation into James Webb.

Naming the United States’ flagship space after James Webb, a former Administrator of NASA was a controversial choice. Webb was: a.) not a scientist, and b.) presided over NASA during a time in which people identifying as LGBTQ+ were discriminated against. NASA investigated Webb’s involvement in those practices last year, and released the full report today.

Based on the available evidence, the agency does not plan to change the name of the James Webb Space Telescope. However, the report illuminates that this period in federal policy – and in American history more broadly – was a dark chapter that does not reflect the agency’s values today.

Putting Amazon’s Alexa in space is harder than you think

We sent our smart home reviewer to check out an Alexa designed for space travel before it launched on its journey to the Moon.

Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
NASA’s Artemis 1 mission is finally headed toward the MoonNASA’s Artemis 1 mission is finally headed toward the Moon
Mary Beth Griggs and Andrew J. Hawkins
Mary Beth Griggs
Mary Beth Griggs
Liftoff!

NASA’s megarocket, the Space Launch System has launched!

Mary Beth Griggs
Mary Beth Griggs
We are go for launch!

The countdown clock has just started, we’re less than 8 minutes away from the launch of the Artemis 1 mission.

How to watch NASA’s Artemis I SLS megarocket launch

Emma Roth and Mary Beth Griggs
Mary Beth Griggs
Mary Beth Griggs
Please hold.

NASA’s Artemis 1 mission was scheduled to launch at 1:04AM ET. But the launch is now in a holding pattern while engineers try to figure out how much work still needs to be done after troubleshooting multiple issues, including an ‘intermittent’ hydrogen leak a ‘problematic’ ethernet cable.

Mary Beth Griggs
Mary Beth Griggs
The Red Crew is going in.

With just hours to go before the latest launch window opens for NASA’s Artemis 1 mission, a small team of technicians is about to enter the launch area to try to fix an intermittent hydrogen leak.

NASA says it should take the Red Crew about 15 minutes to “torque the packing nuts” at the base of the mobile launcher. Watch NASA’s coverage, or follow along with us as we watch the launch attempt.

NASA’s megarocket is about to blast off toward the Moon

Here’s a cheat sheet for the Artemis I mission

Mary Beth Griggs