NASA, International Space Station and aurora
NASA astronaut Donald Pettit recently posted a video from the ISS, capturing vivid auroras as seen from space. This phenomenon occurs when solar winds interact with the Earth's atmosphere, highlighting the beauty of these natural displays.
Most of the Expedition 72 crew enjoyed a day off on Tuesday, while two NASA astronauts focused on cutting-edge human research and biotechnology studies. This work comes as the crew prepares for two spacewalks later this month,
Now officially seven months on board the International Space Station, the two NASA astronauts who flew up on Boeing’s Starliner last June have a busy schedule in the new year while awaiting their flight home in the spring.
Watch NASA astronaut Don Pettit's breathtaking video of the aurora from the International Space Station, showcasing nature's incredible light display. The stunning footage has captured the attention of thousands on social media!
NASA astronaut Don Petit's video of an aurora has gone viral on social media. He is currently in the ISS for approximately six months along with two cosmonauts.
NASA astronaut Don Pettit captured footage of the northern lights as he floated above eastern Canada Sunday. NASA astronaut Don Pettit captured footage of the northern lights as he floated above eastern Canada Sunday.
NASA Astronaut Don Pettit captured the northern lights from space in footage released on Sunday (January 5). Pettit was above Eastern Canada when he orbited over the northern lights, also referred to as aurora borealis.
The raging wildfires engulfing Los Angeles are just the latest natural disaster made more frequent and more intense by climate change. But buried in the pages of Project 2025, a Trump Cabinet pick has laid out a strategy to undercut the federal government’s most comprehensive and influential climate report.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wants NASA to relocate its headquarters from Washington, D.C., to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida's Brevard County.
Two US astronauts who have been stuck for months on the International Space Station (ISS) said Wednesday they have plenty of food, are not facing a laundry crisis, and don't
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson and Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy hosted a conversation with astronauts Nick Hague, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams and