These five August releases may have been lost in the news cycle
Find out why the next mission to Mars is so exciting on the National Air and Space Museum's podcast AirSpace
A new tool from the space agency may produce the gas, completing the next step for planning a round trip voyage
National Air and Space Museum director Ellen Stofan reflects on the significance of the United Arab Emirates upcoming mission to Mars
Quarantine did not stop these innovators from discovering new species, creating the elusive fifth state of matter remotely, and more
These five recent releases may have been lost in the news cycle
Smithsonian curator Jennifer Levasseur examines NASA's relationship with spacecraft contractors
The newfound 'invisible' object is only 1,000 light years from home
Using the lunar module as a lifeboat and employing techniques never before considered, the astronauts' ordeal ended triumphantly
Find a hobby, for starters, and don't forget the mission, say scientists who have worked at remote research stations
Apollo 15 Command Module Pilot Alfred "Al" Worden, an aviator, engineer and storyteller passed away on March 18, 2020
On July 31, 1971, Al Worden performed the first deep-space extra-vehicular activity. "No one in all of history" saw what he saw that day
In an illustrated narrative, Perseverance—scheduled to launch this summer—searches for any signs of past microbial life on Mars
Medicine gets trippy, solar takes over, and humanity—finally, maybe—goes back to the moon
From astronaut ice-cream to Plymouth Rock, a group of scholars gathered at the 114th Smithsonian Material Culture Forum to address tall tales and myths
Physicists will try to observe quantum properties of superposition—existing in two states at once—on a larger object than ever before
Deep underground, in abandoned gold and nickel mines, vats of liquid xenon and silicon germanium crystals will be tuned to detect invisible matter
Looking back on the groundbreaking discoveries of NASA's little telescope that could
Whether you are a telescope enthusiast or just want to step outside to enjoy the night sky, these are the phenomena to look out for this year
The oldest dust sample, perhaps 7 billion years old, predates the formation of our planet and the sun
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