
Copernical Team
NASA Interns help to solve the Terminator Problem via GLOBE Challenge

US Space Command chief in Seoul as two sides deepen space cooperation

Enabling human control of autonomous partners

NASA Marshall team soars to success in microgravity

Oceanographic research satellite launched

NASA tests system for aircraft positioning in supersonic flight

AIAA and Space ISAC team up to defend space from cyber attack

Live now: Lunch with the Moon

Live now: Lunch with the Moon
Live now: Lunch with the Moon
Pacific sees a 'Blood Moon' rising

Stargazers across the Pacific Rim will cast their eyes skyward on Wednesday night to witness a rare "Super Blood Moon", as the heavens align to bring an extra-spectacular lunar eclipse.
The first total lunar eclipse in two years will happen at the same time as the Moon is closest to Earth, in what astronomers say will be a once-in-a-decade show.
If the skies are clear, anyone living in the Pacific between Australia and the central United States will be able to see an enormous, bright, orangey-red Moon.
The main event will be between 1111-1125 GMT—late evening in Sydney and pre-dawn in Los Angeles—when the Moon will be entirely in the Earth's shadow.
The Moon will darken and turn red—a result of sunlight refracting off the Earth's rim onto the lunar surface—basking our satellite in a sunrise- or sunset-tinged glow.
PUNCH mission passes important milestone

On May 20, 2021, the Polarimeter to UNify the Corona and Heliosphere (PUNCH) mission achieved an important milestone, passing NASA's Preliminary Design Review (PDR) of its spacecraft and payload experiments.