June is a critical month in spaceflight history for women, with both Valentina Tereshkova and Sally Ride lifting off in that month.
Author: Emre Kelly, Florida Today
SpaceX scrubs launch of Starship’s first integrated test flight from Texas
Liftoff would have marked the first test launch of the company’s fully integrated Starship vehicle. The launch will be postponed at least 48 hours.
SpaceX is ready to bet the house on Starship’s first orbital launch from Starbase in Texas
The test window for Starship and Super Heavy’s flight orbital launch opens Monday morning. Here’s what it could mean for major missions to come.
Sonic booms heard across Florida as Space Force’s secretive X-37B plane makes landing
Dozens of reports of sonic booms streamed in from across Florida early Saturday with the return of an Air Force spaceplane.
‘Glad to be back’: SpaceX capsule carrying 4 astronauts returns to Earth, splashes down in the Atlantic
The capsule parachuted into the ocean Friday, just off Jacksonville, Florida, about five hours after it left the space station
NASA now targeting Saturday for Artemis I launch to the moon
NASA’s Artemis I mission was scheduled to launch Monday to take a capsule with three test dummies to the moon and back.
Florida coast braces for NASA’s Artemis I moon launch, expecting at least 100,000 visitors
NASA’s Artemis I mission is set to launch August 29 from Kennedy Space Center in Florida. At least 100,000 visitors are expected for the first window.
NASA ‘strongly rebukes’ pro-Russian separatist flag display on International Space Station
NASA called Russian space agency Roscosmos’ move “inconsistent” with the space station’s aim to advance science and technology for peaceful purposes.
NASA loses 2 weather satellites after Astra rocket launch fails to deliver them to orbit
Space startup Astra launched a rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Sunday but failed to deliver NASA payloads to orbit after liftoff.
Ukraine invasion divides U.S., Russia on Earth, but alliance in space remains stable for now
For nearly 10 years after the shuttle program ended, NASA paid Russia to ferry U.S. astronauts to the space station. For some missions, it still does.