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| SpaceX Could Launch NASA Astronauts Into Space in Early 2020 The United States' long human-spaceflight drought may not last much longer. American astronauts have had to rely solely on Russian Soyuz spacecraft to get to and from orbit since July 2011, when NASA retired its space shuttle fleet. (Suborbital space is a ... | |
| NASA chief says SpaceX properly focused on Crew Dragon NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine visited SpaceX's California rocket factory Thursday, toured the sprawling facility with founder Elon Musk and told reporters he is optimistic the company will be ready to launch the first piloted test flight of its Crew Dragon ... | |
| Supermagnetic Stars May Form from Mergers The most magnetic stars may have their origins in merging stars, a new study finds. When it comes to relatively massive stars — ones more than 1.5 times the mass of the sun — previous research found that about 10% have strong magnetic fields that are on ... | |
| NASA and SpaceX Are Feuding. Will They Make Up? A visit by the NASA administrator to a rocket factory is usually a predictable show-and-tell of the latest gadgets destined for outer space. But there may be some tension below the surface on Thursday when the current administrator, Jim Bridenstine, stops by ... | |
| These alien geysers spew life's building blocks The Cassini mission to Saturn is over, but scientists still pore over its data. The newest discovery is of organic compounds – the ingredients of amino acids, the building blocks of life – in water vapor plumes from Saturn's moon Enceladus. arrow. Sharing is ... | |
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| NASA's newest mission, ICON, expected to launch tonight (CNN) NASA's ICON mission to explore where Earth's weather meets space weather is expected to launch Thursday evening at 9:30 p.m. ET from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. ICON will be air-launched on Northrop Grumman's L-1011 ... | |
| Peering into batteries: X-rays reveal lithium-ion's mysteries Billions of smartphone owners are familiar with the dreaded "low battery" symbol on their devices. While consumers groan, scientists are working to understand why and when lithium-ion batteries in phones, plug-in electric vehicles, and other applications lose ... | |
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