News

The White House has instructed NASA employees to destroy two major, climate change-focused satellite missions. As NPR reports ...
U.S. Transportation Secretary and acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy joined President Donald J. Trump in signing of the Executive Order.
Yet, the White House is moving to do just that. This isn’t just about two satellites. It’s about trust, data, and NASA’s role ...
The U.S. planetary science community is sounding the alarm about plans to discard a nuclear technology that has powered ...
So far in 2025, there have been 176 total global launch attempts, 104 from the U.S., Harvard University astrophysicist ...
It's not summer 2014, yet the White House has thrown an iced-water bucket at NASA’s Earth-science program: its FY-2026 budget ...
Sean Duffy, the acting administrator of NASA for a little more than a month, has vowed to make the United States great in space.
Trump is back in the White House and believes NASA should be focused on the national and economic security of America.
At least 1 in 5 NASA staff — mostly top scientists, engineers and senior managers — plan to announce their departure by a Friday deadline, according to documents I obtained this week.
"This reckless order puts people and wildlife at risk from private companies launching giant rockets that often explode and ...
They are debating how to reassess funding and international partnerships to make European space missions more autonomous, ...