Artemis II, NASA and On The Moon
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White House official addresses investigation into deaths and disappearances of NASA scientists
A White House official comments on investigating dead and missing NASA scientists as questions grow and new details emerge in the ongoing case.
Artemis II science team members Jacob Richardson (left) and Kiarre Dumes react to the astronauts’ observations during the Moon fly-by. Credit: NASA/Luna Posadas Nava. Johnson Sp
This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Why this NASA climate scientist wants you to stay angry on Apr 7, 2026.
Artemis II’s journey around the moon, scheduled to conclude on Friday, has delivered stunning new images of our home world taken from space. Those pictures remind us that Earth has changed immensely since the last time astronauts went near the moon in 1972.
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NASA scientists react with audible screams of delight as Artemis II astronauts witness micrometeorite impacts
NASA scientists reacted in real time as Artemis II astronauts observed micrometeorite impacts on the Moon’s far side during a rare lunar flyby eclipse
Space is not as empty as it looks. Right now, as you read this, NASA scientists are actively watching dozens of objects drifting, spinning, and hurtling through our cosmic neighborhood, some of them unpleasantly close to Earth's orbital path. A few of ...
NASA has contributed a complementary perspective from the air. Researchers used NASA airborne remote-sensing technology to measure how the local ecosystem