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The Pentagon's Office of Inspector General (OIG) is to assess the effectiveness of U.S. Space Force oversight of the Global ...
A NASA instrument aboard the International Space Station has detected contamination from Mexican sewage that spilled into the ...
A NASA Office of Inspector General report released late last year raised concerns about whether it would be safe or even affordable to operate past the 2030 date. When is the next Florida launch?
The International Space Station has an ongoing leak that the agency calls a "top safety risk." Here's how the leak is being managed on the aging orbital laboratory.
Officials from NASA and Russia’s space agency don’t see eye to eye on the causes and risks of small but persistent air leaks on the International Space Station. That was the word from the new ...
“While the Russian team continues to search for and seal the leaks, it does not believe catastrophic disintegration of the PrK is realistic,” Bob Cabana, a former NASA astronaut who now chairs ...
While Russia believes the risk is low, NASA is reportedly concerned the leaks could lead to a catastrophic structural failure. The leaky module is not new—cosmonauts first detected the leak in 2019.
The dispute between NASA and Russia's Roscosmos space agency over an air leak in the Russian segment of the International Space Station (ISS) continues following a meeting of NASA 's ISS Advisory ...
With the ISS slated for retirement by the end of the decade, NASA has identified 50 "areas of concern," including cracks and persistent oxygen leaks, one of which has been ongoing since 2019 in ...
The leak has been ongoing since 2019 in the Russian segment of the International Space Station (ISS) and was the focus of a new report from NASA 's Office of the Inspector General (OIG) published ...
NASA has been so concerned with the cracks that officials have negotiated a deal with their Russian counterparts to seal off the small segment and keep the hatch to it open only during critical ...
Earlier this summer, NASA engineers found that a Teflon seal in a valve known as a "poppet" expanded while Starliner's thrusters were firing, greatly degrading their performance.
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