NASA, Moon and Artemis
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President Trump, who will meet the Artemis II crew today (April 29), has described the astronauts as 'pioneers' in NASA's plan to return to the moon.
In an on-going overhaul of NASA's Artemis program, agency officials say it will take seven years to build a sophisticated base on the moon.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman defends the budget cut, responds to “extinction‑level” warnings, and shares future NASA plans.
In February, NASA administrator Jared Isaacman announced a major shift in its Artemis program. Aside from "pausing" the Lunar Gateway space station that was to be built in orbit a
The Artemis program was officially named and announced by NASA in May 2019, when Artemis III was intended to land “the first woman and next man” on the lunar South Pole in 2024. Since then, the uncrewed Artemis I test flight launched in 2022, and Artemis II is complete.
We should embrace this optimistic future, remembering that investment in space exploration is also an investment on Earth.
A group of local high schoolers is contributing to the exploration of the final frontier. After months of hard work, an all-girl group of eight Frontier High School