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11 May 2026, 20:51 GMT By Sumer Loggins 4 variants

Nicholas Houghton always dreamed of working at NASA and one day becoming an astronaut. Today, he helps design systems that keep crews safe during missions aboard NASA’s Orion spacecraft, including the successful Artemis II mission around the Moon. After joining NASA as a Pathways intern, Houghton later became a full-time engineer on the Orion Crew Survival Systems (OCSS)

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Nicholas Houghton: Engineering Crew Safety for NASA’s Artemis Missions
11 May 2026, 19:11 GMT By Elyna Niles-Carnes 4 variants

NASA will hold its 2026 Lunabotics Challenge Tuesday, May 19, to Thursday, May 21, at the Astronauts Memorial Foundation’s Center for Space Education at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida. Links to view the Lunabotics competition live can be found on the agency’s Lunabotics page. The competition is slated to run between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. each day. Media are invited to attend the

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NASA Invites Media to Annual Lunabotics Robotics Competition
11 May 2026, 18:34 GMT 2 variants

The Optical Guidelines document provides standardized, transparent, and repeatable process for assessing the quality of optical data from commercial Earth Observation missions.

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Joint Earth Observation Mission Quality Assessment Framework – Optical Guidelines Documents Released
11 May 2026, 14:01 GMT 3 variants

NASA astronaut Jessica Meir poses with an Extravehicular Mobility Unit (EMU) spacesuit during an official portrait session at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston.

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NASA Astronaut Jessica Meir
11 May 2026, 14:00 GMT 3 variants

The Milky Way’s galactic bulge, the bulbous region that surrounds the galactic center, contains a dense collection of stars, planets, and other free-floating objects. This region has been studied for decades with numerous ground-based and space-based telescopes, including NASA’s Hubble and James Webb space telescopes. Soon, NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will be the

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Hubble Survey Sets Up Roman’s Future Look Near Milky Way’s Center
11 May 2026, 00:00 GMT By El Cielo de Canarias

These people are not in danger. What is coming down from the left is just the Moon, far in the distance. Luna appears so large here because she is being photographed through a telescopic lens. What is moving is mostly the Earth, whose spin causes the Moon to slowly disappear behind Mount Teide, a volcano in the Canary Islands of Spain off the northwest coast of Africa. The people pictured are 16 kilometers away and many are facing the camera because they are watching the Sun rise behind the photographer. It is not a coincidence that a full moon sets just when the Sun rises because the Sun is always on the opposite side of the sky from a full moon. The featured video was made in 2018 during a full Milk Moon. The video is not time-lapse -- this was really how fast the Moon was setting.

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Credit: El Cielo de Canarias
10 May 2026, 13:57 GMT 2 variants

## Community Coordinated Modeling Center Database Of Notifications, Knowledge, Information ( CCMC DONKI ) ## Message Type: Space Weather Notification - M5.7 Flare ## ## Message Issue Date: 2026-05-10T13:57:29Z ## Message ID: 20260510-AL-003 ## ## Disclaimer: NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center is the United States Government official source for space weather forecasts. This "Experimental Research Information" consists of preliminary NASA research products and should be interpreted and used accordingly. ## Summary: Significant flare detected by GOES. Flare start time: 2026-05-10T13:19Z. Flare peak time: 2026-05-10T13:39Z. Flare intensity: M5.7 class. Source region: N21E65 (Active Region 14436) (based on SDO imagery). Increased energetic proton fluxes possible. Updates on this event will be provided when available. Activity ID: 2026-05-10T13:19:00-FLR-001. ## Notes:

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FLR
10 May 2026, 00:00 GMT By Luc Perrot (TWAN)

Orion never had a sword like this. As Comet C/2025 R3 (PanSTARRS) heads out of the inner Solar System, it is putting on quite a show for long exposure cameras. Currently seen toward the constellation of Orion the Hunter, the distant Orion Nebula is visible on the upper right. Comet R3 PanSTARRS is now showing two distinct tails: a short dust tail pointing toward the top of the image and a long and wavy ion tail trailing off toward the upper left. The ion tail points away from the Sun and glows blue from excited carbon monoxide. Large particles in the dust tail somewhat resist the radiation pressure that push them away from the Sun and so retain a bit of the comet's orbit. The dust tail shines by reflected sunlight. The featured image was taken a few days ago from France's Reunion Island in the southern Indian Ocean. Growing Gallery: Comet R3 PanSTARRS in 2026

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Comet R3 PanSTARRS and Orion
Credit: Luc Perrot (TWAN)
9 May 2026, 00:00 GMT

Many bright nebulae and star clusters in planet Earth's sky are associated with the name of astronomer Charles Messier from his famous 18th century catalog. His name is also given to these two large and remarkable craters on the Moon. Standouts in the dark, smooth lunar Sea of Fertility or Mare Fecunditatis, Messier (left) and Messier A have dimensions of 15 by 8 and 16 by 11 kilometers respectively. Their elongated shapes are explained by the extremely shallow-angle trajectory followed by an impactor, moving left to right, that gouged out the craters. The shallow impact also resulted in two bright rays of material extending along the surface to the right, beyond the picture. Intended to be viewed with red/blue glasses (red for the left eye), this striking stereo picture of the crater pair was recently created from high resolution scans of two images (AS11-42-6304, AS11-42-6305) taken during the Apollo 11 mission to the Moon.

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Messier Craters in Stereo
8 May 2026, 22:50 GMT By Joseph Zakrzewski 3 variants

NASA and SpaceX are targeting a mid-May launch to deliver scientific investigations, supplies, and equipment to the International Space Station. Loaded with about 6,500 pounds of supplies, the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft will lift off aboard the company’s Falcon 9 rocket from Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. Following its arrival to the orbital complex, Dragon will dock autonomously to the forward port of

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NASA’s SpaceX 34th Commercial Resupply Mission Overview
8 May 2026, 18:11 GMT 2 variants

Description This colorized image of Mars was captured by NASA’s Psyche mission on May 3, 2026, about 3 million miles (4.8 million kilometers) from the planet. The spacecraft is approaching the planet for a gravity assist on May 15 that will give it a boost in speed and adjust its trajectory toward asteroid Psyche for

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NASA’s Psyche Mission Captures Mars During Gravity Assist Approach
8 May 2026, 18:11 GMT By Rafael Alanis 14 frames

Seen in 14 Photojournal categories

Description This colorized image of Mars was captured by NASA’s Psyche mission on May 3, 2026, about 3 million miles (4.8 million kilometers) from the planet. The spacecraft is approaching the planet for a gravity assist on May 15 that will give it a boost in speed and adjust its trajectory toward asteroid Psyche for […] The post NASA’s Psyche Mission Captures Mars During Gravity Assist Approach appeared first on NASA Science .

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NASA’s Psyche Mission Captures Mars During Gravity Assist Approach
Credit: Rafael Alanis
8 May 2026, 17:36 GMT By Jason Costa 4 variants

Listen to this audio excerpt from Anton Kiriwas, senior technical integration manager for NASA’s Exploration Ground Systems Program: When Anton Kiriwas first spotted an image of the Moon and Mars hanging over a job fair booth while in college, it captured his imagination, yet felt like a dream too distant to chase. He had no

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I Am Artemis: Anton Kiriwas
8 May 2026, 17:05 GMT By Loura Hall 5 variants

For decades, NASA has advanced on-board spacecraft computer processors that coordinate and execute the functions needed to support mission success. Space computing originated in the 1960s with the Apollo Guidance Computers, which were pivotal for guidance, navigation, and control computations during NASA’s first Moon missions. For decades, radiation-hardened processors have been the backbone of the

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NASA, Industry Advance High Performance Spaceflight Computing
8 May 2026, 15:23 GMT 3 variants

This celestial image captured from a window on a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft docked to the International Space Station highlights the Milky Way rising above Earth's atmospheric glow.

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Glowing Views from the Space Station
8 May 2026, 14:00 GMT By Cheryl Warner 4 variants

NASA announced Friday that Brian Hughes will return to the agency as senior director of launch operations, based at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. In this role, Hughes will provide enterprise-level leadership, strategic direction, and operational oversight for NASA’s launch infrastructure. Reporting to NASA Headquarters in Washington, Hughes will have direct responsibility for

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NASA Names Brian Hughes to Launch Operations Role
8 May 2026, 14:00 GMT By Ellen Bausback 6 variants

With a small blue crane, four researchers hoist a cylindrical fuel cell, which looks like a stack of flattened silver and gold soda cans bundled together, into the air and lower it into a rectangular cart on wheels. A tangle of tubes and wires spiral away from the system, where nearly 270 sensors and 1,000

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NASA Fuel Cell Tests Pave Way for Energy Storage on Moon