European scientists are turning an aircraft into a laboratory that simulates lunar gravity to prepare astronauts and technology for future moon landings as part of the NASA-led Artemis missions.
Blue Origin will launch its first suborbital rocket launch of 2025 today — and attempt a wild spin trick to mimic the moon's gravity during the flight — but if you want to see it live, you'll need to ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. Jeff Bezos’ rocket company gave NASA a brief ...
This image provided by Blue Origin shows New Shepard seconds after takeoff in West Texas, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2025. (Blue Origin via AP) (AP) — Jeff Bezos’ rocket company gave NASA a brief taste of the ...
Jeff Bezos’ rocket company gave NASA a brief taste of the moon’s gravity Tuesday, without straying too far from home. Blue Origin launched the 29 lunar technology experiments to the edge of space from ...
Jeff Bezos’ rocket company gave NASA a brief taste of the moon’s gravity Tuesday, without straying too far from home. Blue Origin launched the 29 lunar technology experiments to the edge of space from ...
Jeff Bezos' rocket company has given NASA a brief taste of the moon's gravity without straying too far from home. Jeff Bezos’ rocket company gave NASA a brief taste of the moon’s gravity Tuesday, ...
Jeff Bezos’ rocket company gave NASA a brief taste of the moon’s gravity Tuesday, without straying too far from home. Blue Origin launched the 29 lunar technology experiments to the edge of space from ...