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Justine Calma
NASA’s chief scientist is out.

The agency is axing the Office of the Chief Scientist and the the Office of Technology, Policy and Strategy.

NASA contributes significantly to research on climate, weather, air quality, and the environment. Joe Biden appointed chief scientist Katherine Calvin, who was recently stopped from joining a meeting of the United Nations’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Science reports.

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Jess Weatherbed
Blue Ghost’s lunar landing has real Apollo vibes.

The footage is so crisp that it almost looks like CGI. Check out the incredible shot of the Firefly Aerospace lander’s shadow coming back into focus after the Moon dust settles.

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Elizabeth Lopatto
Wernher Von Braun cosplayer calls actual astronaut a slur.

Elon Musk, the US’s would-be dictator, isn’t content with lying about the Boeing Starliner astronauts, who unexpectedly spent much longer in space than they planned after the Boeing craft had thruster failures. When Andreas Morgensen, a Danish astronaut, called the lies what they were, Musk replied with offensive name-calling.

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Justine Calma
NASA’s climate website is ‘moving.’

It’s “going to look a little different” as it migrates to a more general science site, according to NASA. President Donald Trump has called climate change a “hoax,” and researchers have been archiving environmental data in case it starts to disappear from federal websites.

The Biden administration’s climate and economic justice screening tool, a federal website on reproductive rights, and NASA’s diversity and inclusion pages appear to be down.

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Andrew Liszewski
Swapping big camera lenses is easy when you’re not fighting gravity.

NASA astronaut Don Pettit, who has taken some of the best photos of the stars and Earth ever captured aboard the International Space Station, recently shared a video on X highlighting how easy it is to juggle and swap big camera lenses in zero gravity. Keeping dust out of lenses is still an issue, but accidentally dropping one is not.

NASA astronaut Don Pettit changes camera lenses in zero gravity aboard the International Space Station.
Juggling thousands of dollars worth of camera lenses seems a lot less stressful and complicated aboard the International Space Station, as NASA astronaut Don Pettit recently demonstrated.
GIF: Don Pettit / X
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Andrew Liszewski
NASA’s Apollo missions inspired this $800 calculator watch.

A British startup has miniaturized the interfaces Apollo astronauts used aboard the command and lunar modules to create the DSKY Moonwatch. In addition to basic calculator functions the watch has GPS waypoint navigation and a battery good for 24 hours of use between charges with a USB cable.

You can preorder it now for £649 (around $814) and delivery is expected sometime in Q1 of 2025.

The Apollo Instruments DSKY Moonwatch against an image of the moon’s surface.
The Apollo Instruments DSKY Moonwatch against an image of the moon’s surface and a person pressing its buttons.
The Apollo Instruments DSKY Moonwatch worn on a person’s wrist.
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The DSKY Moonwatch’s design is inspired by the Apollo guidance computers.
Image: Apollo Instruments
The end of the ISS will usher in a more commercialized future in space

Can privately owned space stations replace the ISS? And what becomes of the research?

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Andrew Liszewski
Spend your holidays cozying up to NASA’s rocket engine fireplace.

Need something more intense than a burning log to help you relax this season? NASA now has its own festive fireplace featuring an eight hour loop of the burning RS-25 engines used for the launch of the Artemis I mission two years ago. The fireplace can be streamed on NASA Plus, or you can watch it on YouTube.

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Justine Calma
This new website shows sea level rise across the US.

NASA and other federal agencies launched a new website last week that shows past, present, and future sea level rise along America’s coastlines. It combines data from satellites with readings from sensors on the ground to create an interactive map.

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Wes Davis
NASA’s Crew-9 mission that will bring the Starliner astronauts home launches today.

At 9:10AM ET, the agency will kick off a livestream of the start of the Crew-9 mission meant to bring stranded NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunni Williams back to Earth next year.

Out of the loop? Check our storystream on the Boeing Starliner issues that left them stuck on ISS. Liftoff is scheduled for 1:17PM ET today.

Why NASA is sticking with Boeing

The Starliner debacle fueled speculation that the space agency would dump Boeing. But if it did, it would be left with SpaceX — and Elon Musk.

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Richard Lawler
Boeing Starliner is about to return to Earth, watch here.

After separating from the ISS a few hours ago, Starliner is making its uncrewed landing, which is scheduled to touch down in New Mexico just after midnight ET.

If you’re up, you can watch it live on NASA’s YouTube channel.

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Richard Lawler
Boeing Starliner is finally on its way back.

The troubled spacecraft successfully undocked from the ISS without issue just after 6PM ET, and now it is scheduled to land at 12:01AM ET on Saturday at White Sands Space Harbor in New Mexico.

Still image from the live stream of Starliner’s autonomous undocking showing the spacecraft as it slowly separated from the ISS.
Image: NASA (YouTube)
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Richard Lawler
NASA is about to talk about its decision on how to bring the Starliner astronauts home.

Boeing’s first crewed Starliner launch got Sunita Williams and Barry Wilmore to the International Space Station in June, but with issues including helium leaks, will the same vehicle still bring them home?

We expect to find out during NASA’s press conference that was scheduled to start at 1PM ET following an Agency Test Flight Readiness Review.

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Richard Lawler
On Saturday, NASA will determine the next steps for the Boeing Starliner’s crew.

Will astronauts Barry ”Butch” Wilmore and Sunita Williams come home from the ISS on the Starliner, or will they wait to hitch a ride home from SpaceX next year without protective space suits?

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson and leadership will hold an internal Agency Test Flight Readiness Review on Saturday, Aug. 24, for NASA’s Boeing Crew Flight Test. About an hour later, NASA will host a live news conference at 1 p.m. EDT from Johnson Space Center in Houston.

The invisible problem with sending people to Mars

Getting to Mars will be easy. It’s the whole ‘living there’ part that we haven’t figured out.

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Sheena Vasani
NASA will decide on bringing Starliner astronauts home by the end of August.

In the meantime, NASA officials said on a media call that they will weigh the risks of bringing Barry Wilmore and Sunita Williams home on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon.

The spacesuits they brought wouldn’t work, so they’d have to return without the protection of wearing one. Staying in space longer, however, could expose the astronauts to extra radiation.