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NASA SEWP was the first GWAC in the Federal Acquisition arena and the original contract was awarded in 1993. SEWP II was awarded in 1996, SEWP III in 2001, SEWP IV in May 2007 [13] and SEWP V in May 2015. [3] SEWP VI is scheduled to begin May 2025. [14]
Surveyor 6 is the sixth lunar lander of the American uncrewed Surveyor program that reached the surface of the Moon. Surveyor 6 landed on the Sinus Medii . A total of 30,027 images were transmitted to Earth.
WISE achieved at least 68, 98, 860, and 5400 μJy; 5 sigma sensitivity at 3.4, 4.6, 12, and 22 μm for the WISE All-Sky data release. [27] This is a factor of 1,000 times better sensitivity than the survey completed in 1983 by the IRAS satellite in the 12 and 23 μm bands, and a factor of 500,000 times better than the 1990s survey by the Cosmic ...
April 2026 [6] Reid Wiseman Victor Glover Christina Koch Jeremy Hansen: SLS Block 1 Crew Kennedy Space Center, LC-39B: ≈10d First crewed flight, carrying four crew members on a circumlunar free-return trajectory. Artemis 3: Mid-2027 [6] TBA: SLS Block 1 Crew Kennedy Space Center, LC-39B: ≈30d Carrying Artemis III mission hardware.
NASA’s commercial crew program manager Steve Stich said mission managers are not ready to announce a return date. The goal is to bring Wilmore and Williams back aboard Starliner, he added.
October 2018: planned launch date as of 2016. [3] Early 2019: planned launch date as of October 2017. [41] May 2020 or later: planned launch date as of March 2018. [42] 30 March 2021: planned launch date as of June 2018. [33] 31 October 2021: planned launch date as of July 2020. [34] November 2021 or later: planned launch date as of June 2021. [35]
On 12 July 2023, NASA celebrated the first year of operations with the release of Webb's image of a small star-forming region in the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex, 390 light years away. [ 279 ] In September 2023, two astrophysicists questioned the accepted Standard Model of Cosmology , based on the latest JWST studies.
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is a space telescope for NASA's Explorer program, designed to search for exoplanets using the transit method in an area 400 times larger than that covered by the Kepler mission. [6]