Artemis, the landing radar
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Apollo 11 landing site today: What remains 56 years later will surprise you
The Apollo 11 landing site remains frozen in time on the Moon. Footprints, equipment, and historic artifacts still sit undisturbed decades later. This video explores what remains and why it may stay unchanged for millions of years.
Last week, on the day of the Artemis launch, a newsroom conversation turned into a powerful reminder of how NASA’s legacy still resonates today. During an editorial meeting, photojournalist
Meet the Press broadcast from Cape Kennedy space center and welcomed the three NASA astronauts who commanded Apollo missions 8, 9 and 10 ahead of the historic launch of Apollo 11, which would land Americans on the moon.
The Artemis launch marks NASA’s first crewed mission to the moon in 54 years. The last trip, Apollo 17, all the way back in 1972. Today, those who lived through those events, as well as the first
Recordings containing the original, top-quality broadcast of the Apollo 11 moon landing were accidentally erased after being discreetly stored in an unlabelled storage facility by NASA. Whilst other footage of the landmark 1969 mission remained intact, the ...
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On Wednesday evening, NASA successfully launched its Artemis II mission, sending four astronauts to circle the moon for the first time since 1972. One Utah resident spoke on her experience watching
HOUSTON, Texas -- NASA's Mission Control from the Apollo days has been meticulously restored to the way it looked 50 years ago. The control room at Johnson Space Center in Houston was last used for space shuttle flights in the 1990s. Friday's grand opening ...
Tom's Hardware on MSN
Original Apollo 11 code open-sourced by NASA
The historic computer software code that took Apollo 11 to the moon has been open-sourced and is available to anyone to read, download, and tinker with.