6 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

NASA

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
What’s next for the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft?

After the Bennu sample capsule’s release, NASA renamed the OSIRIS-REx mission. Now called OSIRIS-APEX, the spacecraft will meet up with a 1,000-foot-wide asteroid called Apophis.

Apophis will miss the Earth by about 20,000 miles in 2029 — that’s closer than our own Moon.

OSIRIS-APEX will study the gravitational effects of the close pass on “the asteroid’s orbit, spin rate, and surface.”

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Here’s what NASA is actually doing right now with OSIRIS-REx.

NASA put together a rendered preview to show what’s happening during today’s return of a sample scooped up from the asteroid Bennu, showing what the delivery and release of the OSIRIS-REx capsule looks like.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Listen to NASA talk about the asteroid sample that’s coming back to Earth on Sunday.

We’re a couple of days away from the OSIRIS-REx mission dropping off a capsule containing pieces of the asteroid Bennu that it snatched in 2021.

Right now, a NASA press conference is letting the media ask questions of the project’s leaders about what to expect this weekend.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
NASA released footage of the Parker Solar Probe flying through a coronal mass ejection.

According to NASA: “Coronal mass ejections are immense eruptions of plasma and energy from the Sun’s corona that drive space weather.” You can find out more about the probe’s mission and see the uncompressed, unedited version on NASA’s website.

NASA launched the probe to learn more about the Sun in August 2018, and it’s already taken an incredible photo of Venus. You can also find out more about how it deals with being hit by all that solar dust and where it got its name.

Parker Solar Probe’s Wide Field Imagery for Solar Probe (WISPR) camera observes as the spacecraft passes through a massive coronal mass ejection on Sept. 5th, 2022.
Parker Solar Probe’s Wide Field Imagery for Solar Probe (WISPR) camera observes as the spacecraft passes through a massive coronal mass ejection on Sept. 5th, 2022.
Image: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Naval Research Lab
More than Sally Ride: Loren Grush explains how NASA’s first women astronauts changed space

In the 1980s, NASA wanted space to become a booming business — and the first six women astronauts were meant to help get it off the ground.

Nilay Patel
Wes Davis
Wes Davis
This NASA picture could show Russia’s failed lunar lander’s final resting place.

The agency’s space-based Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter captured an image of a new crater in the region Roscosmos, Russia’s space agency, estimates is where its Luna 25 lander crashed, according to a NASA blog post on Thursday.

Luna 25 was lost last month, just days before India’s own Moon lander successfully touched down and began sending back images.

A GIF cycles between two images of the moon, with one showing a single large crater and many smaller ones, and another showing the same, with an apparent new crater centered in the image.
NASA’s LRO shows a crater that may have been created by the crash of Russia’s Luna-25.
Image: NASA
Wes Davis
Wes Davis
An ancient supernova remnant gets the James Webb telescope treatment.

NASA’s telescope is now studying the 168,000-light-year-distant Supernova 1987A, which was discovered almost 40 years ago and has been observed ever since. NASA’s blog says training the James Webb Space Telescope on it has already borne fruit.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
If you’ve never watched video of a spaceship docking with the International Space Station, here’s your chance.

The Crew-7 mission successfully docked with the ISS this morning at 9:16AM PT, bringing four new crew members to the station.

Video from the docking procedure shows the capsule approaching the station while in Earth orbit, then footage from the capsule as it made its final approach. It’s perfect Sunday viewing.

Justine Calma
Justine Calma
Check out NASA’s new air pollution maps

There are plenty of pollution blind spots that ground monitors miss. So NASA launched a powerful new instrument in April to track air pollution from space. The new tool, called TEMPO, monitors three smog-forming pollutants: nitrogen dioxide, formaldehyde, and ground-level ozone. NASA released the first data maps from TEMPO today. They show pollution building up over major cities in North America, including Los Angeles, New York, and Washington, DC.

1/2Credits: Kel Elkins, Trent Schindler, and Cindy Starr/NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
Umar Shakir
Umar Shakir
We see you space Voyager.

NASA’s Voyager 2 probe is showing signs of a “heartbeat,” according to a tweet from the agency’s Jet Propulsion Lab. The interstellar probe had inadvertently lost contact with Earth last week after a series of planned commands were transmitted to it on July 21st — shifting the Voyager 2’s antenna two degrees away from Earth.

Voyager 2 is expected to reorient and resume communications in October.

Alex Cranz
Alex Cranz
Voyager 2 can’t talk to Earth again.

The 45-year-old interstellar probe lost contact after a “routine sequence of commands,” according to Gizmodo. Its antenna currently isn’t facing Earth, which makes it impossible to communicate across the approximately 12.4 billion miles between us. But fortunately, Voyager 2 is programmed to reorient itself toward Earth a few times a year, so we should presumably regain contact in October.

That’s a few months from now, and if NASA regains contact it won’t be the longest we’ve gone without communicating with the probe. That record was established back in 2020 when Voyager 2 went over 8 months without contact during a necessary communications update.

Stay safe out there, little buddy.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
How I learned to stop worrying and love the nuclear spaceship?

Lockheed Martin has been awarded a contract from DARPA to “develop and demonstrate a nuclear-powered spacecraft” for the joint DARPA and NASA DRACO project. The first demonstration will “take place no later than 2027.”

[NTP] uses a nuclear reactor to quickly heat hydrogen propellant to very high temperatures... then funnels that gas through the engine nozzle to create powerful thrust... The reactor will not be turned on until the spacecraft has reached a nuclear safe orbit, making the NTP system very safe.

That last bit is important — see the 1978 Kosmos 954 accident that spread radioactive debris all over the Canadian wilderness.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
JWST celebrates its first year of science with another incredible image and a new head of science.

We’ve been following the story of NASA’s next-gen James Webb Space Telescope for years, but now it’s been in operation for an entire year.

You can watch Loren Grush talk through those first images, check out the first Earth-sized exoplanet it discovered, or check out our breakdown of major highlights from its first year.

Also, Space.com notes NASA recently announced Jane Rigby is the JWST’s new senior project scientist. Named the 2022 LGBTQ+ Scientist of the Year by Out to Innovate, Rigby was one of three commissioning scientists for JWST and replaces John Mather, who had been in the role since 1995.

An active star-forming region. Red dual opposing jets coming from young stars fill the darker top half of the image, while a glowing pale-yellow, cave-like structure is bottom center, tilted toward two o’clock, with a bright star at its center. The dust of the cave structure becomes wispy toward eight o’clock, trailing off and allowing stars and distant galaxies to show through. Above the arched top of the dust cave three groupings of stars with diffraction spikes are arranged.
The subject is the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex, the closest star-forming region to Earth.
Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Klaus Pontoppidan (STScI)
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Add another one to Cassini’s list of greatest hits.

Data from NASA’s Cassini probe shows signatures of phosphorous in a subsurface ocean on Enceladus, one of Saturn’s moons. According to planetary scientist Frank Postberg of Freie Universität Berlin, “It’s the first time this essential element has been discovered in an ocean beyond Earth.”

Six years after its mission ended with a dive into Saturn’s atmosphere, the list of Cassini discoveries keeps growing. You can read the scientist’s paper here or check out this video from a few years ago explaining how Cassini collected those particles.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Now the US State Department has a “strategic framework for space diplomacy.”

The Washington Post points out this 25-page document (PDF) released Tuesday by the State Department. The Post reports this signals further involvement of the diplomatic corps in a realm that until now, has been largely managed by NASA and the Pentagon.

This first Strategic Framework for Space Diplomacy outlines how State Department diplomacy will advance continued U.S. space leadership and will expand international cooperation on mutually beneficial space activities, while promoting responsible behavior from all space actors, strengthening the understanding of, and support for, U.S. national space policies and programs, and promoting international use of U.S. space capabilities, systems, and services.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
NASA beamed a record 200Gbps to the ground using a space laser.

NASA’s 530km-high TeraByte InfraRed Delivery (TBIRD) system reached a staggering 200Gbps downlink to a receiver on the ground, IEEE Spectrum reports. This doubles last June’s 100Gbps throughput, which “was 100 times faster than the quickest internet speeds in most cities.”

Less than ten years ago, NASA was celebrating just over 600Mbps, but it now thinks the tech could eventually enable up to 5Gbps throughput from the moon:

Moreover, Mitchell says, they are looking at ways to push TBIRD’s capabilities as far away as the moon, in order to support future missions there. The rates under consideration are in the 1 to 5 gigabit per second range, which “may not seem like much of an improvement, but remember the moon is roughly 400,000 km away from Earth, which is quite a long distance to cover,” Mitchell says.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Spoiler alert.

While ever-so-optimistically noting this is a preview of the Earth’s fate (in another 5 billion years or so), scientists at MIT, Harvard, and Caltech say that for the first time, they were able to see a star expand and engulf a nearby planet.

This horror show was captured within our own galaxy and included the use of NASA’s asteroid-hunting Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (NEOWISE) to capture infrared light indicating dust released from the disintegrating planet.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Lo-fi beats to orbit the Earth to.

Whether you put this up on the big screen now or bookmark it for a later session, NASA’s put together nearly an hour of 4K footage of the Earth with some relaxing music for your screensaving needs.

The videos were captured over the last year from the International Space Station during Expeditions 67 and 68.

Alex Cranz
Alex Cranz
NASA’s first trip back to the Moon has a crew.

In a very Apple event-esque livestream, NASA announced the crew of the Artemis II mission, which will ride the costly and enormous SLS rocket to the Moon and back in 2024. Notably this is the first lunar mission to include a woman, a Black man, and a Canadian. The crew is Mission Specialist Christina Koch, Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, Pilot Victor Glover, and Commander Reid Wiseman.

Scientists erupt at NASA gutting funding for crucial Venus mission

The recent discovery of volcanic activity on the planet should have been a cause of celebration. But instead, the scientific community is in shock after NASA delayed funding for a key mission to Venus.

Georgina Torbet
Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Crew-6 mission postponed just two minutes from launch.

NASA and SpaceX called off Monday’s launch intended to take the Crew-6 mission to the International Space Station following a last-minute technical issue with Falcon 9’s engine ignition system.

Providing the issue is resolved, the teams will attempt another launch at 12:34AM ET on Thursday, March 2nd.