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NASA reports advances in exploration and innovation in Trump's first year
Summary
NASA says it completed two human spaceflight missions and launched 15 science missions in the first year of President Donald J. Trump's second term.
Content
NASA reports measurable progress across human spaceflight, science, aeronautics, and technology during the first year of President Donald J. Trump's second term. The agency ties this progress to a clarified National Space Policy and funding noted in the Working Families Tax Cut Act. NASA highlights recent activity as accelerating work across lunar exploration, Earth science, planetary defense, aeronautics, and technologies for future deep space missions. The agency says these steps are positioning it for upcoming missions such as Artemis II and continued science launches.
Key developments:
- NASA reports it flew two human spaceflight missions during the year.
- NASA reports the launch of 15 science missions and a successful test flight of a new X-plane.
- The Space Launch System (SLS) and Orion were rolled out for Artemis II preparation.
- NASA says Artemis II will send humans around the Moon and that the agency plans to return astronauts to the lunar surface by 2028.
- NASA plans to bring the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope into operation before the end of the year and is advancing nuclear power and propulsion technologies.
Summary:
NASA frames these items as part of a sharpened mission focused on human exploration, scientific discovery, and technology development. The agency says Artemis II is upcoming and that work continues on missions and capabilities aimed at returning humans to the Moon by 2028 and supporting future deep space exploration.
