Earth, SpaceX and Fram2 astronauts
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For the first time ever, the four astronauts aboard the Dragon will explore Earth from a polar orbit as they fly from pole to pole.
From USA TODAY
SpaceX's Fram2 mission will launch cryptocurrency billionaire Chun Wang into orbit with three crewmates on March 31 on a first-of-its-kind astronaut flight over Earth's poles.
From Space.com
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After last week's explosive X-flare, sunspot AR4046 is at it again! Could this latest eruption bring stormy space weather to Earth?
NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are back on earth after they spent more than nine months stuck at the International Space Station.
Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore have returned to Earth after spending over nine months in the ISS. Feeling good and ready to resume everyday activities, Williams shared details of her readjustment period and the meals consumed in space during their mission.
A Bitcoin investor's privately funded SpaceX mission has made history by launching the first-ever human spaceflight over both poles, combining adventure, science, and a bold new orbital path.
From satellite-powered connectivity to climate monitoring and disaster management, space technology is helping solve challenges across industries.
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Space.com on MSNThis sulfur-based space molecule could tell us about the emergence of life on EarthResearchers have created a "fingerprint" of a sulfur-based molecule found in space that may offer new clues about the formation of life on Earth, a new study reports.Sulfur is an essential element for life as we know it,
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -After nine months in space, NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are readjusting to Earth life with dog walks and family time, while resuming work with Boeing to test the capsule that stranded them on the International Space Station.
To be clear, not NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, but rather the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
Nasa astronaut Sunita “Suni” Williams has shared her experience passing over the "incredible" Himalayas and Indian landscape from onboard International Space Station. In their first news conference since coming home,