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NASA

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is the agency of the United States government that is responsible for the nation’s civilian space program and for aeronautics and aerospace research.

A 3D-printed Rotating Detonation Rocket Engine Fires Successfully

A new terahertz wireless link that could be an order of magnitude faster than 5G

Technology that could bring a space launch to any airport

The world’s first full-scale planetary defense test against potential asteroid impacts on Earth

A cutting-edge nuclear thermal propulsion rocket engine for deep space missions

NASA’s first planetary defense mission test launches today

Solar electric propulsion using Hall thrusters for the first time beyond lunar orbit

How about a telescope rivalling Hubble but costing almost 1000 times less?

First oxygen extracted from The Red Planet by converting carbon dioxide into oxygen

Water on the sunlit surface of the Moon

A COVID-19 prototype ventilator in 37 days built by NASA

Revitalizing the search for extraterrestrial life

Grow your own rooms on the moon, Mars and maybe even Earth

Developing satellites that can fix other satellites

For his latest study, professor Ou Ma engineered robots to work independently but collaboratively When satellites break, which is surprisingly often, there isn’t much you can do about them. They become expensive and dangerous flotsam, orbiting Earth for years or generations until gravity eventually draws them to a fiery death in the atmosphere. University of

Developing satellites that can fix other satellites

Measuring the massive migration of sea creatures at night from space using lasers

Every night, under the cover of darkness, countless small sea creatures – from squid to krill – swim from the ocean depths to near the surface to feed. This vast animal migration – the largest on the planet and a critical part of Earth’s climate system – has been observed globally for the first time

Measuring the massive migration of sea creatures at night from space using lasers

Using satellite data in disaster scenarios cuts response time and costs

According to a new study, emergency responders could cut costs and save time by using near-real-time satellite data along with other decision-making tools after a flooding disaster In the first NASA study to calculate the value of using satellite data in disaster scenarios, researchers at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, calculated the time that

Using satellite data in disaster scenarios cuts response time and costs

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