A key antenna in NASA’s Deep Space Network (DSN) that was damaged last fall is expected to remain offline until May.
Beyond the range of GPS and tracking satellites, the moonship depends on radio dish arrays for communication and navigation.
When the general public thinks about NASA, they likely think about space shuttles, rockets, satellites, and the International Space Station in Earth's lower orbit. Despite NASA's future without the ...
One of NASA’s most critical deep space antennas has been knocked out by flooding, and the damage is proving far harder to fix than anyone initially hoped. The loss of this single dish has rippled ...
One of NASA's deep space antennas that has been critical for communication with spacecraft for years hasn't been working since September 16, 2025. Located in Goldstone, California, the antenna ...
NASA's Artemis II mission will transport four astronauts around the moon, bringing the agency one step closer to sending the ...
NASA has broken ground near Canberra, Australia, on a project to replace its three 70-meter Deep Space Network (DSN) antennas with a new generation of 34-meter antennas by 2025. The 70-meter (230-foot ...