NASA, moon
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In the 1960s, the United States won the space race decisively by planting the American flag firmly on the moon. Over the next five years, 12 NASA astronauts walked on the moon before the Apollo program,
Artemis II’s successful lunar flyby on Wednesday was a big step toward landing humans back on the moon soon, but NASA has much bigger, multi-billion-dollar plans in store for the next
NASA unveils a bold $20 billion plan to return to the moon, build a lunar base, expand commercial space activity and launch nuclear-powered missions to Mars by 2028.
The next U.S. trip to the Moon isn’t about planting a flag. It’s about learning how to live and work there. NASA has just reset its Artemis program, marking a clear strategic shift: Space exploration is moving away from a race to achieve milestones and toward a system built on repeated operations,
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.
The end of the historic Artemis II mission kicks off a race to establish a permanent human presence on the moon.
NASA races to build a $20 billion lunar base as China and Russia advance moon ambitions, with experts warning China holds the advantage in space.
In case you missed NASA’s announcement from last week, NASA will gradually increase the complexity of the missions to the Moon until it manages to establish a permanently occupied base. Knowing where water is could go a long way to informing the agency and its partners where it’s best to erect this base.
Schmitt to Newsmax: Steady Cadence is Key to Future Moon Base