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Although it won’t hit Earth, an asteroid once labeled a “city killer” is now back in the spotlight — this time, because it ...
KTLA-TV Los Angeles on MSN5h
An inside look at how NASA scientists tracked a ‘city killer’ asteroid's new possible path to the moon
Although it won’t hit Earth, an asteroid once labeled a “city killer” is now back in the spotlight — this time, because it might hit the Moon. KTLA speaks with Davide Farnocchia, navigation engineer ...
NISAR, built jointly by NASA and India’s space agency and launched on Wednesday, will use radar to monitor tiny changes ...
With the NFL season about to start, Aaron Lafferty and the team are talking fantasy football in this week's episode of Fantasy Plus. (July 31, 2025) ...
NASA is collaborating with the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on a space mission to launch a first-of-its-kind ...
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Futurism on MSNNASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory Reportedly Holding "Going Out of Business Sale" for Satellites
NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab is reportedly holding a 'going out of business sale" for its satellites, which are destined to be decommissioned, NASA Watch reports. The list of for-sale assets includes ...
Front Page Detectives on MSN20d
Scientists Believe an Asteroid Might Crash Into the Moon in 2032, a Once-in-5,000-Year Event
Scientists Believe an Asteroid Might Crash Into the Moon in 2032, a Once-in-5,000-Year Event A recently discovered asteroid has entered the limelight, putting scientists around the world on alert.
A 47-year-old scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory who worked on robotic systems for exploring Mars and extreme environments on Earth has died in a small plane crash in Los Angeles ...
Using open-source software, experts at the University of Wisconsin–Madison figured out a testing flaw that often led to rovers getting stuck on alien surfaces.
From left, the artists Saskia Wilson-Brown and Shane Myrbeck, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientists Rishi Verma, Anjali Tripathi and Kevin Hand in Pasadena, Calif., in front of a Mars rover.
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, one of the world’s premier centers for robotic space exploration, is laying off about 325 people, or roughly 5 percent of the workforce, laboratory director ...
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