A History of Tomorrow – A Conversation with Former NASA Chief Historian, Dr. Roger Launius – YouTube Watch On On Episode 193 of This Week In Space, Rod Pyle and
A History of Tomorrow – A Conversation with Former NASA Chief Historian, Dr. Roger Launius – YouTube Watch On On Episode 193 of This Week In Space, Rod Pyle and
Refresh Get notified of updates 2026-01-17T19:14:56.420Z Artemis 2 rocket continues toward launch pad in hour five The NASA team behind the scenes making Artemis II possible. Thank you. https://t.co/B699LjmWTLJanuary 17,
Stars don’t start out fully formed. Instead, they begin when clouds of diffuse gas and dust clump together, becoming denser than their surroundings. Gravity does the rest, pulling material inward
Using the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers have witnessed an infant star 20 times larger than the sun setting interstellar clouds ablaze. The source of this cosmic conflagration is a stellar
The new moon of January will be at 2:52 p.m. EST (1952 GMT) on Jan. 18, according to the U.S. Naval Observatory. A new moon is, technically, a conjunction of
Another Starlink launch is now in the record books. SpaceX on Sunday (Jan. 18) sent a new batch of 29 Starlink satellites (Group 6-100) into low Earth orbit. At 6:31
The fever dream continues as Star Trek: Voyager – Across the Unknown now has a confirmed release date. Slated for launch nearly a quarter of a century after the television
In 1971, astronaut David Scott stood on the lunar surface, holding a hammer and a feather, and in the vacuum of the moon, he let them go. They struck the
“Star Trek” is going back to school. The new Trek TV series “Starfleet Academy” is less about exploring the final frontier and more about educating the next generation of explorers,






