NASA to return to moon with Artemis II lunar flyby
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NASA chief Jared Isaacman drops bold workforce order focused on aviation and legacy
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has moved quickly to put his stamp on the agency’s culture, issuing a sweeping workforce directive that ties day‑to‑day work to aviation roots and institutional memory.
On Saturday, Jan. 17 at 7 a.m., NASA will conduct a rollout mission – transporting an 11-million-pound stack four miles from the Vehicle Assembly Building to Launch Pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Station. The journey will take up to 12 hours, NASA said.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has turned to blockchain technology to enhance air travel safety and security. NASA is an independent agency of the U.S. federal government responsible for the country' civil space program and for research in aeronautics and space exploration.
NASA Armstrong adds two retired F-15 jets to support supersonic research for the X-59, enabling high-altitude flights and experimental data collection.
Depending on the timing, NASA could launch a fresh crew to the space station while four other astronauts are flying around the moon.
The Aviationist on MSN
NASA Receives Two F-15Ds for Supersonic Research
Two F-15Ds of the Oregon Air National Guard have been transferred to NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center, where they will join the ones already
Interesting Engineering on MSN
NASA to modify two F-15 fighter jets to support development of silent supersonic X-59
NASA’s experimental X-59 silent supersonic aircraft performed its historic first flight in October last year. Built by Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works, the X-59 aims to replace the loud sonic boom—problematic during the era of the Concorde—with a gentle “thump.”
Look up in the sky! No, really, look. Are those planes supposed to be that low? But don’t worry, says NASA, because the aircraft you are seeing are conducting research and studying atmospheric data. The planes will take flight over Southern California ...
The Dream Chaser space plane was integrated with the 'Shooting Star' module at NASA's Armstrong Test Facility in Ohio. Sierra Space Chief Medical Officer and NASA astronaut Tom Marshburn talks about the benefits of runway landings for spacecraft.