NASA alters Boeing Starliner spacecraft mission
Digest more
Space.com on MSN
Blue Origin delays launch of New Glenn rocket carrying NASA Mars probes, may seek exemption from FAA order for next try
C APE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Blue Origin called off the launch of its giant New Glenn rocket carrying twin NASA Mars probes on Sunday (Nov. 9) due to bad weather at its Florida pad, one day before new federal restrictions take effect for commercial spaceflights.
American space agency NASA said the SLS rocket and the Orion spacecraft of the Artemis II mission are now fully integrated, countdown test to follow.
Live updates from the Starlink 6-78 mission, which launched 10:39 p.m. Nov. 20 from Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center.
Blue Origin's long-awaited mission to launch its New Glenn rocket on a mission sending twin NASA spacecraft to Mars will have to wait a little longer.
Artemis II is scheduled to send four astronauts on an approximately 10-day journey that will loop around the Moon and return to Earth. The mission’s primary objective is to verify the performance of the systems and hardware required for human deep space exploration before full-scale lunar landings commence.
Jeff Bezos founded Blue Origin. Its New Glenn rocket, with liftoff from Florida, is carrying a Mars-bound spacecraft. How to watch from Treasure Coast
Blue Origin welcomed “Never Tell Me the Odds” back to Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Thursday, Nov. 20 — where the rocket booster launched exactly one week prior.