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NASA awards nearly $1 billion for Moon hardware

🏷️ Science & Space🌍 United States🔗 5 sources38Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
NASA awards nearly $1 billion for Moon hardware

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NASA on May 26, 2026 began buying the hardware it says is needed to lay groundwork for a sustained human presence on the Moon, awarding roughly $900 million to $1 billion in task orders to U.S. commercial firms. Under the Lunar Terrain Vehicle Services (LTVS) program the agency gave Astrolab about $219 million and Lunar Outpost roughly $220 million to develop competing crewed/autonomous rovers (Astrolab’s CLV-1 and Lunar Outpost’s Pegasus) intended to operate at the lunar south pole with range requirements of about 125 miles and delivery targeted for 2028. Blue Origin received a Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) cargo task order valued at about $188 million with options worth roughly $280 million to deliver infrastructure, and Firefly Aerospace and other partners were tapped to support drone and delivery work. NASA said three iterative uncrewed “Moon Base” missions and a series of cargo deliveries are planned this year to begin emplacement of rovers, drones and science payloads near permanently shadowed regions where water ice and near-constant sunlight make long-duration operations possible.

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Friday, May 29, 2026 23:26 UTC
NASA awards nearly $1 billion for Moon hardware
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 22:27 UTC
NASA Unveils Contracts and Timelines for Moon Base

China's Shenzhou 21 crew returns after 210-day mission

🏷️ Science & Space🌍 China🔗 4 sources17Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
China's Shenzhou 21 crew returns after 210-day mission

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China’s Shenzhou 21 crew safely returned to Earth on May 29, touching down at the Dongfeng landing site in Inner Mongolia after a 210-day stay aboard the Tiangong space station — the longest single Chinese crewed mission to date. Mission commander Zhang Lu, flight engineer Wu Fei and payload specialist Zhang Hongzhang completed three spacewalks and a programme of experiments in microgravity, materials science, life sciences and aerospace medicine. The trio returned in a different capsule than the one that launched them after a debris-related crack was found in the Shenzhou 20 vehicle; China launched an uncrewed replacement (Shenzhou 22) in November that later brought the Shenzhou 21 crew home. The handover to the Shenzhou 23 team, which arrived on May 24, was completed ahead of one crew member from that mission slated to remain aboard Tiangong for a year. Zhang Lu now holds a Chinese record of seven spacewalks across missions.

Blue Origin New Glenn explodes during hotfire test

🏷️ Science & Space🌍 United States🔥 Trending🔗 107 sources13Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Blue Origin New Glenn explodes during hotfire test

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Blue Origin’s 98-metre New Glenn rocket exploded in a massive fireball during a hot-fire engine test at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on the night of May 28, 2026. Video shows the vehicle erupting and parts of Launch Complex 36 sustaining heavy damage; authorities said no personnel were injured and all were accounted for. The rocket was being prepared for a June mission to deploy 48 Amazon Leo broadband satellites, which were not onboard at the time. The Federal Aviation Administration and U.S. Space Force are aware and Blue Origin and NASA have launched an investigation. The incident comes days after NASA awarded Blue Origin contracts tied to Artemis lunar missions and surface rovers, and follows earlier New Glenn flight anomalies that prompted a recent FAA probe. Blue Origin warned debris could wash ashore and advised the public not to handle any wreckage. Company founder Jeff Bezos and NASA administrator Jared Isaacman pledged a thorough review; Elon Musk and other industry figures responded publicly. Initial analysis points to a first-stage area near the BE-4 engines but the root cause remains unknown.

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The explosion occurred during a cleared static-fire test and primarily involved methane/oxygen propulsion. The main operational impact is damage to launch infrastructure and loss of hardware, which will likely delay New Glenn missions and associated commercial and NASA schedules for months.

Rare 'Blue Micromoon' Peaks This Weekend

🏷️ Science & Space🔥 Trending🔗 10 sources9Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Rare 'Blue Micromoon' Peaks This Weekend

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A rare "blue micromoon" — the second full moon in May that also occurs near lunar apogee — will be visible to much of the world on the night of May 30 into May 31, 2026. The moon reaches peak fullness at 4:45 a.m. EDT on May 31 (08:45 UTC; 9:45 a.m. BST; 6:45 p.m. AEST). At roughly 252,360 miles (about 406,134 km) from Earth, it will be the most distant full moon of the year and will appear approximately 6% smaller and about 10% dimmer than an average full moon. Observers are advised to look at moonrise during dusk on May 30 for the most photogenic views; those in parts of the Southern Hemisphere and across the Pacific may witness the moon pass in front of the red supergiant Antares. Live streams and feeds — including from the Virtual Telescope Project — will carry the event for regions clouded out. By some calculations the specific combination of a calendrical blue moon and a micromoon is uncommon enough that similar pairings are not expected frequently; the next calendrical blue moon is Dec. 31, 2028, while some outlets project a blue–micromoon pairing may not reoccur for decades.

Pigeons' internal compass traced to liver immune cells

🏷️ Science & Space🌍 Germany🔥 Trending🔗 6 sources6Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Pigeons' internal compass traced to liver immune cells

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A multinational team led by researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior and the University of Bonn reports that homing pigeons may use iron-laden immune cells in their livers as a magnetic compass. Published May 28 in Science, the study found millions of ferritin-rich macrophages clustered near nerve fibers in pigeon livers. In behavioural trials, 34 trained pigeons were taken 19 kilometres from their home and released on overcast days after half the birds received a treatment that transiently depletes liver macrophages. Birds with intact macrophages homed in roughly 70 minutes; treated birds became disoriented and did not reliably return until sunlight reappeared. The work complements earlier hypotheses involving eye proteins or beak magnetite by identifying a different, unexpected tissue and offers a mechanistic link—iron-filled immune cells—that could transduce magnetic information to the nervous system. Authors note important gaps remain, including how macrophage signals reach the brain and whether other species share the same system.
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