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South America and much of the continental United States had the best view of Sunday night's lunar eclipse, which lasted nearly five hours.
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A NASA astronaut and the Russian cosmonauts parachute-landed in Kazakhstan on Wednesday after a trip back to Earth from the International Space Station, in a rare instance of U.S.-Russia cooperation.
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The James Webb Space Telescope will give a glimpse of the earliest galaxies formed after the Big Bang � but only if the telescope is kept frigid. That's why there's a tennis court-sized sunshield.
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Space: it’s really big, and really cold. But apparently not cold enough for NASA. And a White River Junction engineering company says it has the ultra-cold technology the space agency’s needs for Project Artemis, which aims to land the first woman and next man on the moon by 2024.
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Take your phone, radio and a blanket into the backyard and tune in to VPR for our Eye on the Sky Star-Gazing Party.
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Wipe the dust off your binoculars and extract the family telescope from the back of the closet: Saturn is about to put on its best and brightest show of the year � an act Jupiter will soon follow.
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The "Super Flower Blood Moon" is happening early Wednesday morning, as a supermoon coincides with a full lunar eclipse. Here's how to see it.
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The company beat out two others in its bid to develop a lunar lander that will bring Americans back to the moon in the coming years.
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Following a 300 million-mile voyage through space and a dangerous drop to the surface, Perseverance will be put through its paces before getting to a search for ancient Martian life.
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It's the first time in over 40 years that fresh lunar samples are being brought back to Earth. Scientists hope to gain a better understanding of lunar volcanic activity and the age of various craters.