Trending Now RSS

NASA

Saves to local browser storage. Followed topics appear on the homepage and refresh on each visit.
Dormant topic. No recent source activity has been picked up for NASA. The page exists for reference but has no live briefing right now.

Also known as nasa artemis·nasa artemis iii·nasa risc-v space chip·nasa space chip·nasa mars mission

0.3 Activity score down · 3d
4.0 Peak score 3d window
Neutral Sentiment
Last updated · next ~07:30
3d First on radar
nasa artemis nasa artemis iii nasa risc-v space chip nasa space chip nasa mars mission
AI Brief

NASA briefing

Live links, source activity, and background coverage for NASA.

AI brief · grounded in cited sources
Trending Activity ▲ +0.1 24h
Trend score · left axis Sentiment score · right axis

Briefing

Live links, source activity, and background coverage for NASA.

Source-backed brief Tracked across 1 sources · brief is internal context Show all sources
Tweakers

Latest from across the web

External coverage we have crawled and indexed for this topic.

View all 4 signals →
Discovery

Videos

From the channels we track

Discussions on the web

Recent threads on Reddit and Hacker News that mention NASA.

More in search →

People also ask

Common questions on NASA, surfaced from across the indexed web.

What needs more work?

Something caused two Raptor engines—one of 33 on the Super Heavy booster and one of six on Starship itself—to fail during Friday’s launch sequence. Raptor failures are nothing new for SpaceX, but this flight marked the first use of the company’s upgraded Raptor 3, a redesign with higher thrust, lighter weight, and improved efficiency. Collectively, the 33 Raptor engines on the booster produced up to 18 million pounds of thrust at full throttle, twice the power of NASA’s Space Launch System rocket used on last month’s Artemis II mission. Starship and Super Heavy have engine-out capability, mean

SpaceX's Starship V3—still a work in progress—mostly successful on first flight
How to get there?

A future with numerous robotic probes spread throughout the Solar System sounds thrilling to space scientists and space enthusiasts, but you can’t get there with flat budgets and billion-dollar missions that take a decade to get off the ground. Many of NASA’s robotic science missions use purpose-built satellites and instruments, usually manufactured by large contractors like Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, university labs, or NASA itself. Unlike SpaceX’s hangars full of reusable rockets, there’s no building with cameras, spectrometers, telescopes, and spacecraft buses—the core chassis of a

"I'll buy 10 of those"—NASA science chief yearns for mass-produced satellites
What’s Next for the Artemis Program?

The purpose of Artemis II was to prove that NASA can once again circle the moon with a crew. The long-awaited lunar landing will have to wait for Artemis IV. In the meantime, the program's third mission will focus on perfecting the technologies that made Artemis II possible and resolving any setbacks, while NASA's partners finish key systems such as SpaceX's lunar descent module. In any case, the agency maintains its goal: to achieve a “return to the moon” by 2030. This story originally appeared in WIRED en Español and has been translated from Spanish.

How and When to Watch the Artemis II Mission’s Return to Earth
Share & embed Quotables, social share, embed snippet

Share

Quotables · click to copy

Verbatim claims you can cite from the briefing. Each quote is sourced from indexed coverage — paste into your own writing or social.

Embed widget

<script src="https://ttek2.com/embed/pulse/nasa" async></script>