
Copernical Team
NASA spots giant debris cloud created by clashing celestial bodies

Black swifts descended rapidly during lunar eclipse

New insight into the possible origins of life

Report to Congress on Hypersonic Weapons

A large solar storm could knock out the power grid and the internet

SpaceX puts another 53 Starlinks in orbit with midnight launch

NASA's Perseverance rover hightails it to Martian Delta

SpaceX aims for late night Starlink launch

Standing tall: Moon rocket milestone for Artemis

Artemis I rocket rolls to launch pad at Kennedy Space Center

The first trip to the moon for NASA's new rocket has one more major hurdle, but it's taking the jump nice and slow as Artemis I began its 4.4-mile journey with a top speed of 0.8 mph to the launch pad Thursday.
The 5.75-million-pound, 322-foot-tall combination of the Space Launch System, Orion capsule and mobile launcher were placed on NASA's crawler-transporter 2 for the 11-hour trip that began just before 6 p.m. to Launch Pad 39-B, where mission managers plan on doing a wet dress rehearsal within the next month.
Thousands crowded the parking lots and open fields surrounding the Vehicle Assembly Building cheering as NASA Administrator Bill Nelson spoke with the towering hardware in the background.
"There's no doubt that we are in a golden era of human space exploration, discovery and ingenuity in space, and it all begins with Artemis I," he said, thanking the NASA employees and family members gathered for the event. "Our workforce has been a relentless spirit. We imagine. We build. We never stop pushing the envelope of what is possible."
Also speaking was Kennedy Space Center director Janet Petro, who pointed out Artemis was following in the trail of 60 years of space exploration.