Live Science on MSN
$20 million NASA mission to visit 'God of Chaos' asteroid saved from budget cuts in last-minute decision
NASA's OSIRIS-APEX mission, which was one of 19 designated to be canceled by the Trump administration, has been saved from ...
Live updates from the Starlink 10-37 mission, which launched 12:35 p.m. Oct. 29 from Launch Complex 40 in Cape Canaveral ...
Florida Tech officials have launched a campus master plan page on the university website that showcases artist's renderings of possible future buildings.
And that computing power has a big environmental footprint. A typical AI data center uses as much electricity as 100,000 ...
The Mobile Rundown on MSN
She Turned a Bra Into a Life-Saving Medical Device for Women Everywhere
A Costa Rican engineer transforms personal loss into innovation, creating a smart bra that monitors women’s heart health and challenges decades of gender bias in medicine.
India Today on MSN
Exclusive interview with Shubhanshu Shukla: 'My trip is a catapult for India's space mission'
When Shukla entered a lift at a Mumbai hotel where he was to address a recent India Today Conclave, a lady inside was glued to her phone. When she did look up and saw Shukla, her eyes lit up, jaw ...
Space.com on MSN
Blue Origin fires up powerful New Glenn rocket ahead of NASA Mars mission launch (video)
The second-ever liftoff of Blue Origin's powerful New Glenn rocket is approaching as the launch vehicle undergoes final ...
Despite the ongoing government shutdown, NASA did manage to complete a major milestone in its effort to send astronauts back ...
"Latvia’s accession to the Artemis Accords is a significant step towards our more active participation in the global space ...
The first dual-satellite mission to another planet, NASA's ESCAPADE (Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers), ...
A U.S. government shutdown has furloughed over 15,000 nonessential NASA employees. Essential operations, including support for the International Space Station and Artemis moon missions, will continue.
Col. Eileen Collins was the first woman to pilot and command a NASA space shuttle. Collins commanded the first flight after the 2003 Columbia tragedy, which also experienced a foam-shedding issue.
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