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IM-1 Nova-C Odysseus launched on 15 February 2024 towards the Moon via Falcon 9 on a direct intercept trajectory and later landed in the south polar region of the Moon on 22 February 2024 and became the first successful private lander and the first to do so using cryogenic propellants. Though it landed successfully, one of the lander's legs ...
Emma, SaganSat 0, Sakura, Wisseed Sat, Binar-2, -3, -4 were deployed into orbit from the ISS on 29 August 2024. [42] CySat-1 and DORA were deployed into orbit from the ISS on 8 October 2024. [43] 6 August 06:42 [52] Long March 6A: 6A-Y21 Taiyuan LA-9A CASC: Qianfan × 18 (G60 Polar Group 01) SSST: Low Earth Communications: In orbit: Operational
Sixth Tianzhou resupply cargo flight to the Tiangong space station. 18 January 21:49:11 [21] Falcon 9 Block 5 F9-291 Kennedy LC-39A: SpaceX Ax-3: SpaceX / Axiom Space: Low Earth Private spaceflight: 9 February 13:30: Successful Axiom Mission 3, launching on Crew Dragon. 14-day commercial flight of four astronauts to the ISS. [20] 20 January 06: ...
Here's a look back at the most pivotal space missions from 2024. SpaceX caught a rocket booster. From Starship tests to Starliner woes, recapping the biggest spaceflight missions of 2024
READ MORE: This Florida Keys beach made the best beaches list. Anne’s Beach: Mile marker 73 in Lower Matecumbe Key in the Village of Islamorada. Not a traditional beach, but also a hidden ...
Second of two satellites for the Copernicus Imaging Microwave Radiometer (CIMR) mission. Part of the European Space Agency's Copernicus Programme. 2031 (TBD) [33] NGLV: D1 Satish Dhawan TLP: ISRO: ISRO: Low Earth: Flight test Maiden flight of ISRO's Next Generation Launch Vehicle (NGLV), codenamed Soorya. 2031 (TBD) [34] Ariane 64: Kourou ELA-4 ...
Updated November 22, 2024 at 5:33 PM An estimated 80 million Americans will travel on Thanksgiving holiday week, according to AAA ‒ and the weather may make a busy travel week even worse.
The Astronaut Beach House is a two-story house built in 1962 as a part of the then Neptune Beach subdivision at Cape Canaveral, Florida. NASA purchased the development through eminent domain for $31,500 in 1963 to accommodate the expanding Kennedy Space Center , [ 1 ] and other private homes were removed.