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03/25/2026

Rover's SHOCKING find on Mars! 🪐

03/22/2026

🚀 Let’s roll!
The massive Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft for Artemis II are officially on the move toward Launch Pad 39B.
🌙 The journey has begun…
🐢 Speed: ~1 mph
⏳ Time: Up to 12 hours
This slow roll carries something huge —
the next human mission around the Moon.
🌌 Why This Moment Matters
This isn’t just transport…
It’s the final steps before launch.
✔️ First crewed lunar mission in 50+ years
✔️ Testing deep space systems
✔️ Preparing humanity’s return to the Moon
✨ Tonight, a giant moves quietly…
And history moves with it.
👉 Would you stay up to watch this?

03/20/2026

📸🪐 "Strange Object Spotted on Mars! 🚀🔍 What Is It? 🌌

08/03/2025

Som ET - 65 - Mars - Curiosity Sol 1155 - VIdeo 2_7845

07/24/2025

Yeah well explain this then?
📸 Spencer Welling

07/22/2025

The Untold Truth Behind NASA’s Most Famous Photo: What Really Happened in Space?"
🚀 Think you know the story behind “Houston, we have a problem”? Think again. Dive into the hidden drama and secrets behind one of NASA’s most iconic moments in history. 🌌

07/22/2025

Buzz Aldrin descends from the Lunar Module (LM) to join Neil Armstrong on the surface of the Moon. This photo was taken by Armstrong using a 70mm Hasselblad camera – hence the vast improvement in quality over the images of Armstrong descending the ladder and stepping onto the surface, which came from a Westinghouse portable B&W TV camera mounted on the LM.

07/22/2025

On this date, July 21, in 1969, the Apollo 11 Lunar Module (LM) ascent stage, with Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin aboard, is photographed from the Command and Service Modules (CSM) in lunar orbit. Michael Collins, Command Module pilot, remained with the CSM in lunar orbit while Armstrong and Aldrin explored the lunar surface. The LM is approaching from below.

NASA photo id: AS11-44-6626

07/21/2025

On this date, July 19, in 1969, at 17:21:50 UTC, Apollo 11 passed behind the Moon and fired its service propulsion engine to enter lunar orbit. In the thirty orbits that followed, the crew saw passing views of their landing site in the southern Sea of Tranquility about 19 km (12 mi) southwest of the crater Sabine D. The site was selected in part because it had been characterized as relatively flat and smooth by the automated Ranger 8 and Surveyor 5 landers and the Lunar Orbiter mapping spacecraft, and because it was unlikely to present major landing or EVA challenges. It lay about 25 km (16 mi) southeast of the Surveyor 5 landing site, and 68 km (42 mi) southwest of Ranger 8’s crash site.

The image shown here was taken by Buzz Aldrin out of the left window of the Lunar Module (LM) while he and Armstrong were activating the LM prior to separation from the Command and Service Module. It shows the southwestern region of the Sea of Tranquility, including the Apollo 11 landing site. At lower left is the silhouette of one of the clusters of reaction control thrusters used to manoeuvre the LM. For a labelled version of this photo see the first comment below.

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