Artemis II astronauts call with ISS, all in space
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A strange purple object aboard the ISS sparked alien fears online, but NASA revealed it was a potato experiment. It shows how microgravity can turn ordinary plants into bizarre shapes.
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A mysterious tentacled object spotted on the ISS sparks panic, yet NASA says the 2026 discovery is actually a breakthrough for 'The Martian'
A Mysterious Tentacled Object Spotted On The ISS Sparks Panic, Yet NASA Says the 2026 Discovery Is Actually a Breakthrough for 'The Martian'
NASA’s Mike Fincke has publicly identified himself as the astronaut who had a concerning “medical event” that led to an early exit from the International Space Station.
In a live lesson 250 miles above Earth, a NASA astronaut spoke virtually to students at his former high school in South Windsor Tuesday. "It's amazing, it's about a once-in-a-lifetime experience,"
The individual who fell ill, NASA's Mike Fincke, says the medical team is almost certain that the issue was related to being in space
NASA proposed a new solution that would bind the private companies more closely to NASA, requiring them not to build free-flying space stations but rather to work directly with the space agency on modules that would, at least initially, dock with the International Space Station. This change was not well-received.
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Astronaut's sudden loss of speech prompted NASA’s first ISS medical evacuation
Learn how 4-time space flier Mike Fincke’s medical episode on the International Space Station is still a mystery to doctors.
Over one month after SpaceX's Crew-11 returned to Earth earlier than expected due to a medical situation, NASA astronaut Mike Fincke decided to share his experience. NASA astronaut Mike Fincke wears personal protective equipment inside the Tranquility module.
WE’LL TAKE A CLOSER LOOK AT THAT WEEKEND FORECAST. STRAIGHT AHEAD. SEE YOU THEN, TONY. NASA IS NOW SETTING ITS SIGHTS NOT JUST ON LANDING ON THE MOON, BUT SETTING UP A PERMANENT HUMAN PRESENCE ON THE LUNAR SURFACE. THAT’S RIGHT. AND THIS FOCUS SHIFTS.
The Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University is playing a pivotal role in the Artemis mission through its groundbreaking contributions to the AVATAR (A Virtual Astronaut Tissue Analog Response) investigation.