NASA, Jared Isaacman and Mars
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NASA technology has helped the world with discoveries used for dustbusters, cellphones and lifesaving COVID-19 equipment along with all kinds of everyday used you wouldn't even think about.
NASA's innovations have transformed daily life. Technology developed for space missions now powers smartphone cameras and GPS. Everyday items like baby formula and memory foam also trace their origins to NASA.
The same space tires that allow the Mars rovers to get around might be coming to your driveway in the near future. Here's the company that could do it.
NASA's X-59 Quiet SuperSonic Technology (QueSST) experimental supersonic aircraft took to the skies for the first time on October 28, 2025 from Lockheed Martin's famously secret Skunk Works at the US Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale,
The former, and possibly future, nominee for the space agency said he did not intend for the document’s public release.
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NASA’s X-59 QueSST Conducts Maiden Flight
After some scrubbed attempts, NASA’s X-59 QueSST flew for the first time from Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale on Oct. 28, 2025. In a landmark milestone for
In the works, currently, are phases deemed “Artemis II and III” – the first of which NASA, in December, pushed back until April of next year. This mission, to send astronauts to the moon and back, would be followed by a trip to the Moon’s south polar region – also pushed back to 2027, with phase 4 scheduled for 2028.
NASA discovered Camp Century, a Cold War U.S. military base buried under Greenland’s ice that was built for a secret missile project.
The United States and China are locked in a contest to be the first country to send humans to the lunar surface in half a century. But there's a developing twist: an emerging competition between American companies to build the landing vehicle that could win this new moon race for the US.
NASA's Psyche has set a new benchmark for space communications. In December 2024, the spacecraft successfully beamed an infrared laser message back to Earth from a mind-boggling distance of 494 million kilometers (307 million miles). That's more than twice ...
Trump said Jared Isaacman's astronaut experience and dedication to "advancing the new space economy make him suited to lead NASA into a bold new era."