Luckily, nobody was harmed. The post NASA Responds to Russia Accidentally Blowing Up Its Only Astronaut Launch Facility appeared first on Futurism.
A Russian Soyuz rocket is raised on the launch pad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on April 5, 2025. Launching three days later, it carried NASA astronaut Jonny Kim and Roscosmos cosmonauts ...
Russia's space program has taken a drubbing in recent years, its reputation battered by corruption scandals, shrinking ...
Suspended above the Mediterranean Sea, Russia's Soyuz MS-28 spacecraft made its final approach to the International Space ...
Three crew members returned to Earth aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft early Tuesday morning, completing an eight-month ...
Russian cosmonaut was recently booted from upcoming NASA and SpaceX mission to the space station that will launch from ...
Oleg Artemyev, a cosmonaut with Russia's space agency, has been replaced on the upcoming SpaceX Crew-12 mission, Roscosmos ...
Since the Site 31 pad is the only one operated by Roscosmos capable of launching both the crewed Soyuz rocket and the ...
Russia will not leave NASA Astronaut Mark Vande Hei behind on the International Space Station, according to Tass, the Russian state-run news outlet. Vande Hei will return to earth with the other ...
Russian cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev was removed from NASA’s Crew-12 mission, reportedly over a possible US security breach ...
NASA astronaut Jonny Kim flew home with two Roscosmos cosmonauts from the International Space Station packed tight in their ...