When the Artemis II four-person crew left Earth’s orbit, they were protected by a computing system designed to move beyond simple redundancy (a la the Apollo missions) to a fail-silent architecture.
The computer system aboard the current Artemis II lunar space mission is from a different world that the one from the Apollo ...
Ales-Cia Winsley, a Jackson State University graduate, is helping lead NASA’s Artemis II mission, drawing on her Mississippi ...
The acquisition of the radio frequency signal from the Artemis II crewed mission to the moon by NASA's Deep Space Network ...
Cutting-edge sensors used during the pre-launch testing were made by Dewetron, an electronics company with US headquarters in ...
The International Space Hall of Fame is inducting five new nominees into the Alamogordo facility. The nominees were chosen ...
From AT&T to NASA, women working as computers performed the calculations that made modern science possible. In the early ...
Discoveries in physics, astronomy and biology — from the Big Bang to DNA code — challenge science-based atheism and point to ...
As four astronauts whiz toward a flyby of the moon, looking out for them are mission control experts using cutting-edge ...
On April 6, 2026, NASA's Orion spacecraft cruised around the Moon, armed to the teeth with vehicle management computers around 20,000 times faster than those used to achieve an even greater feat ...
Students across San Joaquin County recently participated in the annual Science Blast program at University of the Pacific.
Artemis mission shares office space -- and physics -- with Apollo ...