The discovery of “buckyballs” in space solves a 100-year-old mysteryByAkshat Rathi and Katherine Ellen FoleyPublishedJuly 16, 2015
The work we did on Earth to get New Horizons to Pluto: a NASA scientist tells allByMichael SummersPublishedJuly 16, 2015
Spectacular photos from New Horizons showcase Pluto’s 11,000-foot “ice mountains”ByAdam EpsteinPublishedJuly 15, 2015
When New Horizons left, Pluto was still a planet—the story of the most controversial body in the solar systemByAnnalisa MerelliPublishedJuly 14, 2015
NASA took the best photo ever taken of Pluto and put it on InstagramByAdam Epstein and Matt GibbonsPublishedJuly 14, 2015
This is space history: Nine years and 3 billion miles later, New Horizons is soon to zoom past PlutoByAdam EpsteinPublishedJuly 13, 2015
This astronaut is sacrificing his body to go to space for 1,000 daysByNick CaplanPublishedJuly 2, 2015
Mars and Venus have already lost their oceans–Earth could be nextByDavid A. WeintraubPublishedJuly 1, 2015
Venus and Jupiter will appear to collide this week in a spectacular nighttime showByAdam EpsteinPublishedJune 30, 2015
SpaceX has two important missions to perform during Elon Musk’s birthday weekend rocket launchByTim FernholzPublishedJune 27, 2015
The first small step on Mars won’t be made by humans, but by robotsByMike MurphyPublishedJune 25, 2015
NASA now has a humanoid robot working aboard the International Space StationByMike MurphyPublishedJune 19, 2015
Photos: What the sky should look like without light pollutionByMaria Sanchez DiezPublishedJune 18, 2015
If there is life on Mars, it is probably underground—where our rovers can’t see itByMike MurphyPublishedJune 18, 2015
A permanent cloud of moon dust could cause trouble for space travelByKatherine Ellen FoleyPublishedJune 18, 2015
Astronomers discovered a superbright galaxy and named it after soccer star Cristiano RonaldoBySvati Kirsten NarulaPublishedJune 17, 2015
These are the first full-color HD videos of earth from the International Space StationByTim FernholzPublishedJune 17, 2015
Photos: Space crayons and parachuting dogs—a new view of the Soviet space programByLeo MiraniPublishedMay 23, 2015