National Aeronautics and Space Administration  - NASA News podcast artwork

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National Aeronautics and Space Administration  - NASA News

Explore the wonders of the universe with the "National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)" podcast. Delve into cutting-edge space exploration, groundbreaking scientific discoveries, and the innovative technology that propels us beyond the stars. Join leading experts and astronauts as they unravel the mysteries of the cosmos, discuss current missions, and share inspiring stories of human curiosity and achievement. Ideal for space enthusiasts and curious minds, this podcast offers a captivating journey into the world of NASA and its quest to expand our understanding of the universe.For more info go to http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjsThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  1. 171

    Artemis III: NASA's Push to Return Humans to the Moon by 2027

    Artemis is back in the spotlight as NASA confirms it is on track for future Moon missions after the successful Artemis II test flight and moves to name the crew who will help lead humanity’s return to the lunar surface. According to NASA, Orion wrapped up a nearly 700,000 mile journey around the Moon and splashed down safely off the coast of San Diego, giving engineers the data they need to press ahead toward Artemis III, now targeted for 2027, and the first surface missions beginning in 2028. NASA is following that up with an Artemis III mission update event at Johnson Space Center, where the agency is announcing the astronauts who will fly the next phase of the campaign. Inside NASA, leadership is backing this push with an agencywide realignment to sharpen focus on the National Space Policy and streamline how programs are managed. NASA says the changes are designed to better support human exploration, science missions, and partnerships with industry, essentially shifting budget and staff toward missions that get hardware off the drawing board and into space. At the same time, the Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel has urged NASA to rethink how it manages risk on Artemis III and follow-on missions, formally recommending that the agency “rebaseline and redistribute” risk across the campaign. That tension between ambition and safety is now driving key internal decisions, schedules, and spending priorities. For American citizens, Artemis is not just a Moon shot; it is a jobs and technology engine. NASA’s own economic analyses tie Artemis investments to tens of thousands of high-skill jobs across states like Texas, Florida, California, and Alabama, and the agency’s new Spinoff 2026 report highlights how space technologies are improving medicine, aviation, agriculture, and climate monitoring right here on Earth. For businesses, especially in the commercial space sector, the realignment and Artemis timelines signal where NASA plans to spend: lunar landers, spacesuits, communications, and new logistics services. State and local governments with spaceports or major aerospace hubs are watching closely, because every schedule change can affect local economies, infrastructure plans, and education pipelines. Internationally, Artemis remains a flagship for U.S. space diplomacy. Through the Artemis Accords, NASA and the State Department are using lunar exploration to deepen ties with partners in Europe, Japan, Canada, and emerging space nations, shaping norms for how countries explore and use space resources. How NASA balances speed, safety, and openness in Artemis III will help define U.S. credibility as a leader in responsible exploration. If you are wondering what you can do now, NASA is constantly inviting public engagement: you can follow mission milestones on NASA’s official channels, attend virtual briefings, and submit questions during live events. Teachers can tap NASA’s Artemis education resources to bring real mission data into the classroom, and communities can partner with local museums and libraries that host NASA outreach programs. In the weeks ahead, watch for more detailed Artemis III timelines, responses to the safety panel’s recommendations, and updates on NASA’s partnerships with commercial providers to deliver cargo, and eventually crews, to the lunar surface. For more information, check out NASA’s main website, its Artemis mission pages, NASA TV, and the latest NASA Spinoff 2026 report that shows how space technology is changing life on Earth. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update from the frontlines of exploration. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

  2. 170

    NASA's Big Shake-Up: Faster Missions to the Moon and More Space Jobs Ahead

    NASA is shaking up how it does space, and the biggest headline this week comes straight from NASA headquarters: the agency just announced an agencywide realignment to sharpen its focus on the National Space Policy and accelerate missions back to the Moon and beyond, according to NASA’s latest news release page. NASA leaders say this realignment will streamline programs, tighten coordination between human spaceflight, science, and technology, and better connect taxpayer dollars to visible results. In the announcement, NASA emphasized that these internal shifts are about “increasing mission focus” and moving faster on big priorities like Artemis lunar missions and cutting‑edge aeronautics. Tied to that, NASA held a live event outlining a new Science and Discovery program that reshapes how the agency funds research, partners with industry, and transitions lab breakthroughs into real-world applications. In that briefing, officials highlighted a shift toward more competitive, milestone-based funding and closer collaboration with commercial space companies and universities. For American citizens, this sounds abstract, but the impacts are concrete. A more focused NASA means more jobs in engineering, manufacturing, and data science, plus spinoff technologies in areas like climate monitoring, aviation safety, and materials that show up in everyday products. NASA’s realignment is also meant to give the public clearer storylines: when a big mission launches or a new aircraft like the quiet supersonic X‑59 hits a milestone, you can see exactly how it fits into a larger national strategy. For businesses, especially in the growing space and aerospace sectors, the message is opportunity. With NASA pushing harder on partnerships, companies that can deliver launch services, robotics, AI, and Earth-observing hardware are looking at more contracts, more technology transfer, and more chances to prove new systems on NASA missions. State and local governments, particularly those with NASA centers or spaceports, can expect this shift to influence local economies and infrastructure planning. States that invest in STEM education, workforce training, and spaceport facilities will be better positioned to attract NASA projects and associated private investment. On the international front, a more tightly aligned NASA reinforces the United States as a central partner in lunar exploration, climate science, and planetary defense. It sets the tone for how the U.S. works with agencies like ESA, JAXA, and others on Artemis and large science missions, while maintaining clear expectations under the National Space Policy. Looking ahead, listeners should watch for follow-up announcements on how specific directorates are being reorganized, details on new grant and contract opportunities under the Science and Discovery program, and key Artemis mission milestones as NASA moves toward returning astronauts to the Moon later this decade. If you want to engage, NASA encourages the public to follow agency updates, participate in open comment periods when new policies or environmental reviews are posted, and get involved in citizen science projects that use NASA data. For more information, head to NASA’s official website and its news releases page, or check out NASA TV and social channels for live briefings and mission updates. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the latest from space and science. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

  3. 169

    Artemis III Crew Announcement: America's Return to the Moon

    You’re listening to Space Now, and the big headline from NASA this week is all about the Moon: NASA is set to announce the crew for the Artemis III mission, the first American-led attempt this century to return humans to the lunar surface, with the event taking place at Johnson Space Center on Tuesday, according to SpacePolicyOnline and NASA’s own Artemis mission updates. NASA says Artemis III will test how the Orion spacecraft links up in orbit with commercial lunar landers from SpaceX and Blue Origin, a crucial step before any landing attempt. According to NASA’s Artemis III mission preview, this flight will focus on rendezvous and docking in Earth orbit, proving the hardware and choreography needed for future crews to live and work on and around the Moon. This is part of a broader agencywide realignment NASA announced in a recent news release, designed to sharpen mission focus and better implement the National Space Policy by tightening coordination between human spaceflight, science, and technology programs. For American citizens, this isn’t just about planting flags. NASA’s 2026 Spinoff report highlights that space technologies are showing up in everyday life: cleaner manufacturing, more efficient batteries, medical imaging, and even better wildfire detection tools that support public safety on the ground. Those advances often start as mission hardware and end up as products and services in your home or community. For businesses, Artemis is a jobs engine. NASA’s partnerships with SpaceX, Blue Origin, and a growing ecosystem of suppliers mean contracts for spacecraft, propulsion, robotics, and software. According to NASA’s technology transfer office, thousands of companies now license NASA-developed tech, and the new Spinoff edition marks 50 years of turning government research into private-sector innovation. State and local governments are plugged into this too. Communities near launch sites in Florida, testing centers in Mississippi, and Johnson Space Center in Texas see direct economic benefits from infrastructure spending and high-skilled jobs. Local emergency planners and environmental agencies also use NASA Earth science data for hurricane tracking, flood modeling, and air quality alerts. On the international front, Artemis is anchored by the Artemis Accords, where more than two dozen nations have signed on to common principles for safe, transparent exploration. That means Artemis III is not just a U.S. milestone; it’s a signal to allies that cooperative exploration and shared science are the default way of doing business in deep space. NASA officials often emphasize this bigger picture. Administrator Bill Nelson has said that every dollar invested in NASA returns multiple dollars to the U.S. economy, and the Spinoff team notes that many of those benefits are in high-tech manufacturing and STEM jobs that keep the United States competitive. If you’re wondering how to engage, NASA invites the public to watch Artemis briefings on NASA TV, follow mission milestones on its website and social channels, and participate in citizen science projects that use data from Earth-observing satellites and Mars missions like MAVEN, which just provided a new update on the Martian atmosphere through a recent NASA video briefing. In the coming weeks, key things to watch include the official Artemis III crew reveal, follow-on briefings detailing training and mission timelines, and updates from Congress on NASA’s budget decisions that will shape how quickly the agency can move toward a sustained presence at the Moon. For more information, listeners can head to NASA’s main site and the Artemis mission pages, and sign up for NASA news releases to stay ahead of the next wave of announcements. If NASA opens public comment on any related policies or environmental reviews, that’s your chance to weigh in on how America explores space. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the latest from NASA and beyond. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

  4. 168

    NASA Realigns for Artemis III: What the Crew Announcement Means for Space, Jobs, and America

    NASA’s biggest headline this week is an agencywide realignment to sharpen mission focus and carry out the National Space Policy, a move NASA says is meant to better position the agency for what comes next in exploration and science[1]. For listeners, that means NASA is not just talking about the future of space it is reorganizing to move faster on it. The most immediate milestone is Artemis III. NASA says it will announce the crew and provide a mission progress update at 11 a.m. Eastern on Tuesday, June 9, at Johnson Space Center, with the event streamed on NASA+ and YouTube[2]. NASA says Artemis III will launch four astronauts from Kennedy Space Center aboard Orion on the SLS rocket, and the mission will test critical rendezvous and docking capabilities with commercial human landing systems needed to reach the lunar surface[2][3]. That matters for American listeners because Artemis is not just a moon story it is a jobs story, a technology story, and a supply chain story. Contractors building rockets, spacecraft systems, sensors, and communications gear could see clearer direction as NASA narrows priorities[1][3]. For state and local governments, especially Florida and Texas, the activity around Kennedy and Johnson translates into continued demand for workforce support, infrastructure, and public safety coordination tied to launch and crew operations[2]. NASA’s realignment also signals a tighter focus on execution, which can affect how the agency allocates time, staff, and funding across science, exploration, and policy implementation[1]. Internationally, Artemis remains a major cooperation platform, and the upcoming crew announcement will be watched closely by partners and rivals alike because lunar operations increasingly shape the rules of the road in deep space[2][3]. NASA has not published a full public breakdown of all budget shifts in the latest release, but the message is clear: accelerate mission delivery, align with national policy, and keep Artemis moving[1]. If you want to follow the crew reveal, tune in Tuesday, June 9, and watch NASA’s official channels for updates[2]. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Explore the wonders of the universe with the "National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)" podcast. Delve into cutting-edge space exploration, groundbreaking scientific discoveries, and the innovative technology that propels us beyond the stars. Join leading experts and astronauts as they unravel the mysteries of the cosmos, discuss current missions, and share inspiring stories of human curiosity and achievement. Ideal for space enthusiasts and curious minds, this podcast offers a captivating journey into the world of NASA and its quest to expand our understanding of the universe.For more info go to http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjsThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Inception Point AI

Produced by Quiet. Please

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Explore the wonders of the universe with the "National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)" podcast. Delve into cutting-edge space exploration, groundbreaking scientific discoveries, and the innovative technology that propels us beyond the stars. Join leading experts and astronauts as they...

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