News

About 3,870 employees have applied to depart NASA over two rounds through the Trump administration's deferred resignation program, the agency disclosed.
NASA workforce cuts raise fears about safety for space missions The agency is losing 4,000 employees and has no permanent leader after Trump withdrew his previous nominee.
T his week NASA administrator Sean Duffy declared the Trump Administration's intention to land a working nuclear fission reactor on the moon by the end of the decade.
NASA's Planetary Defense Coordination Office (PDCO) leads the nation's mission to protect Earth from potentially dangerous near-Earth objects (NEOs) — asteroids and comets that come close to our ...
NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore retires after 25 years of service, having flown on four different spacecraft including Space Shuttle, Soyuz, Starliner and Dragon.
SANDY SPRINGS, Ga. — A National Night Out event took an unexpected turn when a dinosaur—well, someone dressed as one—popped its head into the Sandy Springs Police Department’s SWAT BearCat ...
Acting administrator Sean Duffy directed NASA to support a broad set of private space-station work as officials battle over winding down the ISS.
Nearly 4,000 NASA employees have chosen to accept the Trump administration's "deferred resignation" option, reducing the agency's workforce by more than 20%.
The new timeline will be announced by interim NASA administrator Sean Duffy, according to a report citing internal documents.
The figure was from 2019, and was a minimum as opposed to the starting salary. By 2025, NASA astronauts had starting salaries more than double that.
NASA revealed roughly 20 percent of its workforce will depart as part of President Trump’s efforts to downsize the federal government since returning to the White House.