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In 2006, a young rocket enthusiast from New Zealand traveled to the United States to show off his experiments to NASA. He was ...
Photo Credit: NASA This nebula, about 7,200 light-years from Earth, is full of new, big stars. A bright arc of multicolored gas, in shades ranging from orange and red to blue and purple.
This image was captured by NASA's Juno spacecraft when it was 11,747 miles (18,906 kilometers) from the tops of Jupiter's clouds. The vibrant swirls and dynamic textures make it a perfect phone ...
NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) has captured what’s believed to be the first orbital image of the Curiosity rover “on the move.” The remarkable photograph, enhanced to bring out ...
Photo Credit: NASA Discover fascinating space facts with stunning wallpapers. Space is so vast that it would take light over 1,00,000 years to travel across our Milky Way galaxy.
Explore 10 stunning NASA wallpapers that showcase the beauty of space, from distant galaxies to stunning celestial phenomena, perfect for space enthusiasts and dreamers alike.
One of the world's best known and certainly most-traveled logos is 65 years old. The NASA insignia has adorned t-shirts and spacesuits, been reproduced 10 stories tall and reached the moon and Mars.
NASA has named David Salvagnini, the space agency’s chief data officer, as its chief artificial intelligence officer, fulfilling a requirement laid out in recent White House guidance and President Joe ...
The NASA worm logo is wriggling its way onto solid rocket boosters that will help launch the four-astronaut Artemis 2 moon mission in 2025. Skip to main content. Open menu Close menu ...
Each iconic NASA “worm” is more than 2 metres high and 7 metres from end to end. The image above shows the crew working on the logo at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
But the NASA administrator in 2020, Jim Bridenstine, thought that bringing the worm back could inspire people who grew up with that version as the logo. And its use could also inspire an entirely ...
The worm endures, even though NASA dumped it more than 30 years ago, returning to “the meatball” — its original logo, with a blue circle, stars, an elliptical orbit trail and a swoosh ...