# NASA
Latest news and articles about NASA
Total: 49 articles found

Beyond the Far Side: Artemis II and the High-Stakes Calculus of the New Lunar Race
NASA's Artemis II mission is set to send four astronauts on a lunar flyby, marking the first crewed mission to the Moon in over half a century and breaking records for human distance from Earth. The mission serves as a critical verification of the SLS and Orion systems, supported by a global consortium of aerospace giants including Lockheed Martin and Boeing.

Boots on the Ground: NASA Abandons the Gateway in Radical Lunar Pivot
NASA has announced a major strategic overhaul of its Artemis program, pausing the Lunar Gateway orbital station to focus on building permanent surface-based infrastructure. The new three-phase plan prioritizes long-term human residency on the Moon, with a crewed landing now targeted for 2028.

NASA’s Great Pivot: Scrapping the Gateway for a Permanent Lunar Foothold
NASA has paused its Lunar Gateway space station project to prioritize the development of permanent habitation and infrastructure on the lunar surface. This strategic pivot delays the next crewed lunar landing to 2028 while focusing on a three-phase plan for long-term human presence.

NASA’s Giant Leap Downward: Why Washington is Swapping Orbit for a $20 Billion Lunar Base
NASA is abandoning its plan for the orbital Lunar Gateway station in favor of a $20 billion permanent surface base. This strategic shift aims to accelerate the Artemis program, turning the Moon into a logistical hub for future nuclear-powered missions to Mars.

NASA Probe Plunges Back to Earth Sooner Than Expected as Sun’s Fury Raises Drag
A retired NASA Van Allen probe re-entered Earth’s atmosphere years earlier than predicted after an unexpectedly active solar cycle increased atmospheric drag. NASA says the risk to people on the ground is low, but the event spotlights the limits of current disposal practices and the growing need for improved space-traffic and debris management.

NASA Inspector-General Warns Starship Lander Is Years Late, Putting 2028 Moon Return at Risk
NASA’s Inspector General reports that SpaceX’s Starship lunar lander is approximately two years behind its original schedule and faces further delays, while Blue Origin’s lander work is also late. These setbacks threaten NASA’s goal of a crewed lunar return in 2028 and increase pressure on programme management, budgets and international partnerships.

Setbacks Force NASA to Reboot Artemis: Lunar Landing Pushed Back, Extra Test Flight Added
NASA has restructured the Artemis lunar programme after recent technical faults and safety concerns, adding a test flight and turning Artemis III into an orbital practice mission in 2027. Crewed lunar landings are now planned for Artemis IV (2028) and Artemis V (2030), reflecting a shift toward caution and institutional reform under the agency’s new chief.

NASA Recasts Artemis: Pushes Commercial Landers into the Spotlight as SLS Troubles Force Rethink
NASA has restructured the Artemis programme to reduce mission risk and allow commercial landers more testing time, after SLS launch vehicle leaks delayed operations. Artemis II's crewed lunar flyaround remains planned pending rocket repairs; Artemis III has been converted into an orbit‑docking and test mission, with crewed lunar landings pushed to Artemis IV in 2028 if timelines hold.

NASA Pushes First Crewed Artemis Moonshot to 2028, Extending a Program of Rolling Delays
NASA has delayed the first crewed Artemis lunar landing from 2027 to 2028, continuing a pattern of timetable adjustments for the flagship return-to-the-Moon programme. The move reflects ongoing technical integration, testing and budgetary challenges and sharpens attention on commercial partners, international competition and next-stage milestones.

NASA Scales Back SLS Upgrades to Boost Launch Pace, Hitting Boeing Contract Value
NASA has cancelled a planned upgrade to its SLS rocket to focus on increasing launch cadence and added an extra unmanned docking test ahead of crewed lunar missions. The shift affects a roughly $2 billion Boeing contract and signals NASA’s prioritisation of reliability and tempo over expanded vehicle capability in the near term.

SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Delivers New Astronaut Team to the ISS, Underscoring U.S. Commercial Space Reliance
A Crew Dragon mission has delivered a new team of astronauts to the International Space Station, highlighting the operational success of NASA’s commercial crew model. The flight reinforces U.S. access to low‑Earth orbit while raising strategic questions about competition, resilience and the future of orbital infrastructure.

SpaceX’s Dragon Carries Multinational Crew to ISS in Another Boost for Commercial Spaceflight
SpaceX’s Dragon launched four astronauts from Cape Canaveral to the International Space Station on February 13, beginning an eight‑month mission focused on experiments to support future Moon and Mars exploration. The flight highlights the maturation of commercial crew services and continued multinational cooperation aboard the ISS despite broader geopolitical tensions.