Ingenuity will never fly again, forever grounded on the Martian dunes, where it looks incredibly lonely.
After an upsetting string of failures, Intuitive Machines is next in line to attempt the first-ever commercial Moon landing.
The company is investigating the incident but claims the wayward object didn't pose a safety issue for the crew on board the spacecraft.
The first robot landed on Mars in 1997, and those little guys have left a legacy of hidden messages, lucky pennies, and supposed last words.
Oleg Kononenko has now spent more time in orbit than any other human and, according to Einsteinian relativity, is now the world’s greatest time traveler.
Former NASA astronauts tested Collins Aerospace’s new spacesuits on a parabolic flight, simulating the weightlessness of space.
The space agency is hosting a workshop for low cost missions to study Apophis despite having two probes in storage that could fit the bill.
After a challenging landing, Japan’s SLIM lander is unlikely to survive the extreme cold during a 14-day lunar night.
The DoD wants its own Starships for sensitive and dangerous missions—and possibly due to concerns about Elon Musk himself.
The space agency is still trying to figure out what may have caused Ingenuity's mission-ending damage, leading to the proposed spin test.
The commercial space station could reach low Earth orbit as early as 2028, just ahead of the planned decommissioning of the ISS.
The company's Electron rocket launched four satellites that will monitor orbital traffic to avoid collisions in space.
The asteroid-sleuthing probe is transitioning from its orbit around the Sun to one beyond the orbit of Jupiter.
Some sensational things happened during the first month of 2024, some good, some bad, and some utterly unexpected.
The Chang'e 7 mission is aiming for a coveted spot on the lunar south pole, one that made the list of NASA's candidate landing regions.
For Eutelsat, landing rights and deploying ground are significant hurdles in the global rollout of its OneWeb internet constellation.
The museum team stacked the Endeavour orbiter on top of an external tank and two solid boosters, marking a big step towards the completion of the display.
It is difficult to emphasise the significance of the milestone surpassed by NASA's Mars helicopter, Ingenuity.
Launching on Tuesday, the mechanical arm is paving the way for doctors to perform virtual surgeries on astronauts in space.
SLIM fell into an unfortunate position last week, with its solar arrays pointed away from the Sun, but the lander has resumed operations after regaining power.
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