Isaacman’s Budget Math: How NASA Plans to Reach the Moon With a Quarter Less Money
Monday, 06 April 2026 10:38
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman spent his weekend on national television arguing that $25.2 billion is enough money to get Americans back on the Moon, even as the budget proposal he was defending would slash the agency’s science portfolio by nearly 44% and put dozens of missions on the chopping block. The fiscal year 2027 budget […]
The post Isaacman’s Budget Math: How NASA Plans to Reach the Moon With a Quarter Less Money appeared first on Space Daily.
Artemis 2 ready to fly around the moon
Monday, 06 April 2026 10:21
The Artemis 2 mission will swing around the moon April 6, setting a distance record as astronauts study part of the lunar farside.
The quiet crisis of people who are excellent in emergencies but fall apart when life is calm
Monday, 06 April 2026 10:08
Some of the most capable people you'll ever meet are quietly miserable when nothing is going wrong. Their nervous systems, calibrated by crisis, register calm as a threat — and the traits that make them exceptional under pressure become sources of suffering during ordinary life.
The post The quiet crisis of people who are excellent in emergencies but fall apart when life is calm appeared first on Space Daily.
How the Voyager missions rewrote planetary science, tested the limits of 1970s engineering, and became humanity’s longest-running experiment in institutional patience
Monday, 06 April 2026 09:08
In November 2026, Voyager 1 will become the first human-made object to reach one light-day from Earth. Nearly 49 years after launch, the twin Voyager missions remain the most productive space exploration program ever flown, and a case study in what happens when engineering resilience meets institutional patience.
The post How the Voyager missions rewrote planetary science, tested the limits of 1970s engineering, and became humanity’s longest-running experiment in institutional patience appeared first on Space Daily.
NASA’s $2.5 Billion Parts Bin: What the Mobile Launcher 2 Stop-Work Order Really Means for Artemis
Monday, 06 April 2026 08:38
NASA has issued a stop-work order on Mobile Launcher 2, the troubled launch platform designed for a version of the Space Launch System rocket that the agency no longer intends to build. The decision marks the end of a project that ballooned from an initial contract to a potential multi-billion dollar liability, and it signals […]
The post NASA’s $2.5 Billion Parts Bin: What the Mobile Launcher 2 Stop-Work Order Really Means for Artemis appeared first on Space Daily.
People who were parentified as children don’t struggle with boundaries. They struggle with the guilt that arrives the moment a boundary works.
Monday, 06 April 2026 08:08
Parentified adults don't struggle to set boundaries — they struggle with the overwhelming guilt that arrives when a boundary actually works, because their nervous system learned early that their needs are dangerous to others.
The post People who were parentified as children don’t struggle with boundaries. They struggle with the guilt that arrives the moment a boundary works. appeared first on Space Daily.
What to know about the Artemis 2 mission's moon flyby
Monday, 06 April 2026 07:50We’re checking your connection to prevent automated abuse
Artemis mission approaches lunar loop for first flyby since 1972
Monday, 06 April 2026 07:35We’re checking your connection to prevent automated abuse
CBP’s Flashcard Fiasco Points to a Deeper Problem: Security Culture Can’t Scale as Fast as Hiring
Monday, 06 April 2026 07:08
Sensitive security codes for a US Customs and Border Protection facility in Texas were reportedly publicly accessible for roughly six weeks on Quizlet, the popular study flashcard platform, before being taken down in March. The leak exposes a basic but persistent vulnerability in federal security: the humans tasked with protecting it. A flashcard set apparently […]
The post CBP’s Flashcard Fiasco Points to a Deeper Problem: Security Culture Can’t Scale as Fast as Hiring appeared first on Space Daily.
How Bennu’s Plumbing System Preserved the Solar System’s Most Fragile Organics
Monday, 06 April 2026 06:38
Nanoscale analysis of a sample from asteroid Bennu has revealed evidence that water did not permeate the body uniformly during its formation but instead may have flowed through restricted channels, creating sharply defined chemical neighborhoods that preserved fragile organic compounds in some zones while transforming others into mineral-rich domains. Research findings suggest this rewrites assumptions […]
The post How Bennu’s Plumbing System Preserved the Solar System’s Most Fragile Organics appeared first on Space Daily.
The people who hold grudges aren’t angry. They’re grieving a version of the relationship they thought they had.
Monday, 06 April 2026 06:08
Grudges are commonly mistaken for stubbornness or anger, but psychological research suggests they function more like unprocessed grief for a version of a relationship that turned out to never exist.
The post The people who hold grudges aren’t angry. They’re grieving a version of the relationship they thought they had. appeared first on Space Daily.
Artemis II Isn’t Just a Moon Flyby — It’s the Validation Test NASA’s Entire Lunar Architecture Depends On
Monday, 06 April 2026 04:38
The Artemis II crew is about to fly farther from Earth than any human being has ever traveled, and the record they’re breaking belongs to a mission that nearly killed its astronauts. As the four-person crew aboard the Orion spacecraft approaches its lunar flyby, the mission is set to surpass Apollo 13’s distance mark from […]
The post Artemis II Isn’t Just a Moon Flyby — It’s the Validation Test NASA’s Entire Lunar Architecture Depends On appeared first on Space Daily.
The reason some people can’t rest after finishing something important is that their identity was fused with the effort, and completion feels like a small death
Monday, 06 April 2026 04:08
Post-achievement depression reveals a painful truth about identity: when your sense of self fuses with your effort, finishing something important can feel less like victory and more like losing the person you were while doing it.
The post The reason some people can’t rest after finishing something important is that their identity was fused with the effort, and completion feels like a small death appeared first on Space Daily.
Isaacman defends NASA budget proposal despite steep cuts
Sunday, 05 April 2026 21:20
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman defended a fiscal year 2027 budget proposal that would cut the agency’s budget by nearly 25%.


