Tag: moon
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Returning to the moon: An overview of the Artemis Program and Artemis II
THE CHARGES THAT SHE’S NOW FACING THIS MORNING. WESH TWO NEWS STARTS NOW WITH BREAKING NEWS. THAT BREAKING NEWS JUST INTO WESH TWO NEWS AND OUR NEWSROOM. NASA IS CONFIRMING THE EARLIEST POSSIBLE LAUNCH OF THE ARTEMIS TWO MISSION IS NOW BEING PUSHED TO SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8TH. IF THAT DATE RINGS A BELL, IT’S BECAUSE IT’S SUPER BOWL SUNDAY. THE AGENCY DIDN’T START THE ROCKET’S WET DRESS REHEARSAL LAST NIGHT. THAT’S DUE TO COLD WEATHER CONDITIONS, SO IT WILL NOW ATTEMPT THE REHEARSAL ON MONDAY, AND THEN THE LAUNCH DATE AND TIME WILL BE FINALIZED. ONCE TEAMS HAVE REVIEWED THE RESULTS OF THE WET DRESS REHEARSAL. AND WE’RE ALSO STAYING ON TOP OF
Returning to the moon: An overview of the Artemis Program and Artemis II
Updated: 10:38 AM EST Jan 30, 2026
Latest updates on Artemis IIJan. 30: ‘Wet dress rehearsal’ delayed due to weatherJan. 28: Cold weather puts wet dress rehearsal in questionJan. 17: NASA rolls out Artemis II at Kennedy Space CenterArtemis II is preparing for launch from the Kennedy Space Center, where the rocket will carry the Orion spacecraft for a second time, this time with a crew on its journey to the moon.The first launch window opens from Feb. 6-11. If it does not launch in February, there will be another window open in March, and again in April if necessary.>> WESH 2 will stream the launch live in this article The mission aims to test the spacecraft’s systems with astronauts aboard before future lunar landings. The 10-day flight aims to help confirm systems and hardware NASA needs for early human lunar exploration missions.According to NASA, four astronauts will venture around the moon on Artemis II, paving the way for a return to the Moon and eventually Mars.The hope is to establish a long-term presence for future exploration and science through the Artemis Program. The science conducted in space is expected to drive progress in medicine and technology on Earth. As the mission prepares for launch, the crawler transporter moved the Artemis II rocker from the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center on Jan. 17, bringing it to launch pad 39-B. “It’s been since 1972 that human beings have gone anywhere in the vicinity of the moon,” said Dr. Don Platt from Florida Tech. A crew of four astronauts will be aboard NASA’s Space Launch System.Commander: Reid WisemanPilot: Victor GloverMission Specialist: Christina KochMission Specialist: Jeremy Hansen The four astronauts will launch aboard NASA’s Space Launch System rocket and travel inside the Orion spacecraft to fly around the moon. In space, they will test critical systems needed for future moon landings. Artemis Program overviewArtemis is NASA’s long-term Moon exploration campaign.The program’s main goals include returning humans to the moon, building a sustained lunar presence, maturing technology and operations needed for human missions to Mars, and doing this all with international and commercial partners.The missions are each designated to different milestones, strategies and individual goals.Artemis IThis mission is complete.It was an uncrewed integrated flight test of the Space Launch System, which is a heavy-lift rocket that launches crews and large cargo toward the moon, and Orion, which is a crew spacecraft that carries astronauts to lunar orbit and returns them to Earth.SLS and Orion went around the moon and came back to Earth.The purpose of this mission was to validate deep-space performance and reentry before flying with a crew.>> Relive the launch of Artemis I here. Aretmis IIThis mission is planned.Artemis II will be the first crewed mission to the moon.The purpose of the crewed flight is to prove life support, operations and high-speed returns with astronauts. Artemis IIIThis mission is planned.Artemis III will be the first crewed lunar landing of the program, targeting the lunar South Pole region.The 10-day mission will include field geology, sample collection/return and deployed experiments.Four astronauts will launch in Oroin, two will land on the moon for surface work, and then they will return to Orion for the journey back to Earth. Artemis IV and beyondThe future missions will aim to expand on capabilities toward sustained operations on the moon, such as more surface time, more cargo and infrastructure delivery, increased use of Gateway as a staging node, and progression toward an “Artemis Base Camp” style sustainable presence. Why the lunar South Pole?It has scientifically valuable terrain and ancient geology.It contains regions with water ice and other volatiles in permanently shadowed areas, which is key for science and potential resources.Its challenging conditions will help prove the systems needed for Mars-class missions. More information Best Central Florida locations to view the launchIn Volusia CountySouth side of New Smyrna Beach (Canaveral National Seashore)Bethune Beach, 6656 S. Atlantic Ave.Apollo Beach at New Smyrna BeachIn Brevard County (the Space Coast)Jetty Park Beach and Pier, 400 Jetty Park Road, Port Canaveral. (There’s a charge to park.) Space View Park, 8 Broad St., TitusvilleAlan Shepard Park, 299 E. Cocoa Beach Causeway, Cocoa BeachCocoa Beach Pier, 401 Meade Ave. (Parking fee varies.)Lori Wilson Park, 1400 N. Atlantic Ave., Cocoa BeachIn Vero BeachAlma Lee Loy Bridge in Vero BeachMerrill Barber Bridge in Vero Beach
Latest updates on Artemis II
Jan. 30: ‘Wet dress rehearsal’ delayed due to weather
Jan. 28: Cold weather puts wet dress rehearsal in question
Jan. 17: NASA rolls out Artemis II at Kennedy Space Center
Artemis II is preparing for launch from the Kennedy Space Center, where the rocket will carry the Orion spacecraft for a second time, this time with a crew on its journey to the moon.
The first launch window opens from Feb. 6-11. If it does not launch in February, there will be another window open in March, and again in April if necessary.
>> WESH 2 will stream the launch live in this article
The mission aims to test the spacecraft’s systems with astronauts aboard before future lunar landings. The 10-day flight aims to help confirm systems and hardware NASA needs for early human lunar exploration missions.
According to NASA, four astronauts will venture around the moon on Artemis II, paving the way for a return to the Moon and eventually Mars.
The hope is to establish a long-term presence for future exploration and science through the Artemis Program. The science conducted in space is expected to drive progress in medicine and technology on Earth.
As the mission prepares for launch, the crawler transporter moved the Artemis II rocker from the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center on Jan. 17, bringing it to launch pad 39-B.
“It’s been since 1972 that human beings have gone anywhere in the vicinity of the moon,” said Dr. Don Platt from Florida Tech.
A crew of four astronauts will be aboard NASA’s Space Launch System.
- Commander: Reid Wiseman
- Pilot: Victor Glover
- Mission Specialist: Christina Koch
- Mission Specialist: Jeremy Hansen
The four astronauts will launch aboard NASA’s Space Launch System rocket and travel inside the Orion spacecraft to fly around the moon. In space, they will test critical systems needed for future moon landings.
Artemis Program overview
Artemis is NASA’s long-term Moon exploration campaign.
The program’s main goals include returning humans to the moon, building a sustained lunar presence, maturing technology and operations needed for human missions to Mars, and doing this all with international and commercial partners.
The missions are each designated to different milestones, strategies and individual goals.
Artemis I
- This mission is complete.
- It was an uncrewed integrated flight test of the Space Launch System, which is a heavy-lift rocket that launches crews and large cargo toward the moon, and Orion, which is a crew spacecraft that carries astronauts to lunar orbit and returns them to Earth.
- SLS and Orion went around the moon and came back to Earth.
- The purpose of this mission was to validate deep-space performance and reentry before flying with a crew.
>> Relive the launch of Artemis I here.
Aretmis II
- This mission is planned.
- Artemis II will be the first crewed mission to the moon.
- The purpose of the crewed flight is to prove life support, operations and high-speed returns with astronauts.
Artemis III
- Artemis III will be the first crewed lunar landing of the program, targeting the lunar South Pole region.
- The 10-day mission will include field geology, sample collection/return and deployed experiments.
- Four astronauts will launch in Oroin, two will land on the moon for surface work, and then they will return to Orion for the journey back to Earth.
Artemis IV and beyond
- The future missions will aim to expand on capabilities toward sustained operations on the moon, such as more surface time, more cargo and infrastructure delivery, increased use of Gateway as a staging node, and progression toward an “Artemis Base Camp” style sustainable presence.
Why the lunar South Pole?
- It has scientifically valuable terrain and ancient geology.
- It contains regions with water ice and other volatiles in permanently shadowed areas, which is key for science and potential resources.
- Its challenging conditions will help prove the systems needed for Mars-class missions.
More information
Best Central Florida locations to view the launch
In Volusia County
- South side of New Smyrna Beach (Canaveral National Seashore)
- Bethune Beach, 6656 S. Atlantic Ave.
- Apollo Beach at New Smyrna Beach
In Brevard County (the Space Coast)
- Jetty Park Beach and Pier, 400 Jetty Park Road, Port Canaveral. (There’s a charge to park.)
- Space View Park, 8 Broad St., Titusville
- Alan Shepard Park, 299 E. Cocoa Beach Causeway, Cocoa Beach
- Cocoa Beach Pier, 401 Meade Ave. (Parking fee varies.)
- Lori Wilson Park, 1400 N. Atlantic Ave., Cocoa Beach
In Vero Beach
- Alma Lee Loy Bridge in Vero Beach
- Merrill Barber Bridge in Vero Beach
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Humanoid robot makes architectural history by designing a building
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What happens when artificial intelligence (AI) moves from painting portraits to designing homes? That question is no longer theoretical.
At the Utzon Center in Denmark, Ai-Da Robot, the world’s first ultra-realistic robot artist, has made history as the first humanoid robot to design a building.
The project, called Ai-Da: Space Pod, is a modular housing concept created for future bases on the Moon and Mars. CyberGuy has covered Ai-Da before, when her work focused on drawing, painting and performance art. That earlier coverage showed how a robot could create original artwork in real time and why it sparked global debate.
Now, the shift is clear. Ai-Da is moving beyond art and into physical spaces designed for humans and robots to live in.
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Ai-Da Robot is the humanoid artist that made architectural history by becoming the first robot to design a building. (FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images)
Inside the ‘I’m not a robot’ exhibition
The exhibition “I’m not a robot” has just opened at Utzon Center and runs through October. It explores the creative capacity of machines at a time when robots are increasingly able to think and create for themselves. Visitors can experience Ai-Da’s drawings, paintings and architectural concepts. Throughout the exhibition period, visitors can also follow Ai-Da’s creative process through sketches, paintings and a video interview.
ELON MUSK TEASES A FUTURE RUN BY ROBOTS
How Ai-Da creates art and architecture
Ai-Da is not a digital avatar or animation. She has camera eyes, specially developed AI algorithms and a robotic arm that allows her to draw and paint in real time. Developed in Oxford and built in Cornwall in 2019, Ai-Da works across disciplines. She is a painter, sculptor, poet, performer and now an architectural designer whose work is meant to provoke reflection.
“Ai-Da presents a concept for a shared residential area called Ai-Da: Space Pod, a foreshadowing of a future where AI becomes an integrated part of architecture,” explains Aidan Meller, creator of Ai-Da and Director of Ai-Da Robot. “With intelligent systems, a building will be able to sense and respond to its occupants, adjusting light, temperature and digital interfaces according to needs and moods.”
A building designed for humans and robots
The Space Pod is intentionally modular. Each unit can connect to others through corridors, creating a shared residential environment.
Through a series of paintings, she envisions a home and studio for humans or robots alike. According to the Ai-Da Robot team, these designs could evolve into fully realized architectural models through 3D renderings and construction. They could also adapt to planned Moon or Mars base camps.

Aidan Meller presents Ai-Da robot, the first AI-powered robot artist during the UN Global Summit on AI for Good, where they are giving the keynote speech, on July 7, 2023, in Geneva, Switzerland. (Johannes Simon/Getty Images for Aidan Meller)
While the concept targets future bases on the Moon and Mars, the design can also be built as a prototype on Earth. That detail matters as space agencies prepare for longer missions beyond our planet.
“With our first crewed Moon landing in 50 years coming in 2027, Ai-Da: Space Pod is a simple unit connected to other Pods via corridors,” Meller said. “Ai-Da is a humanoid designing homes. This raises questions about where architecture may go when powerful AI systems gain greater agency.” The timing also aligns with renewed lunar exploration tied to NASA missions.
Why this exhibition is meant to challenge you
According to Meller, the exhibition is meant to feel uncomfortable at times. “Technology is developing at an extraordinary pace in these years,“ he said, pointing to emotional recognition through biometric data, CRISPR gene editing and brain computer interfaces. Each carries promise and ethical risk. He references Brave New World and warnings from Yuval Harari about how powerful technologies may be used.
In that context, Ai-Da becomes a mirror of our time. “Ai-Da is confrontational. The very fact that she exists is confrontational,” said Line Nørskov Davenport, Director of Exhibitions at Utzon Center. “She is an AI shaker, a conversation starter.”

Aidan Meller, British Gallery owner and specialist in modern and contemporary art, stands beside the AI robot artist “Ai-Da” at the Great Pyramids of Giza, where she exhibits her sculpture during an international art show, on the outskirt of Cairo, Egypt, Oct. 23, 2021. (REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
What this means for you
This story goes beyond robots and space travel. Ai-Da’s Space Pod shows how quickly AI is moving from a creative tool to a decision-maker. Architecture, housing and shared spaces shape daily life. When AI enters those fields, questions about control, ethics and accountability become unavoidable. If a robot can design homes for the Moon, it may soon influence how buildings function here on Earth.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
A humanoid robot designing a building once sounded impossible. Today, Ai-Da’s work sits inside a major cultural institution and sparks real debate. She offers no easy answers. Instead, she pushes us to think more critically about creativity, technology and responsibility. As the line between human and machine continues to blur, those questions matter more than ever.
If AI can design the homes of our future, how much creative control should humans be willing to give up? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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NASA returns humans to deep space after over 50 years with February Artemis II Moon mission
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NASA plans to return humans to deep space next month, targeting a Feb. 6 launch for Artemis II, a 10-day crewed mission that will carry astronauts around the Moon for the first time in more than 50 years.
“We are going — again,” NASA said Tuesday in a post on X, saying the mission is set to depart no earlier than Feb. 6.
The first available launch period will run from Jan. 31 to Feb. 14, with launch opportunities on Feb. 6, 7, 8, 10 and 11.
If the launch is scrubbed, additional launch periods will open from Feb. 28 to March 13 and from March 27 to April 10. For the former, launch opportunities will be available on March 6, 7, 8, 9 and 11, and for the latter on April 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6.
NASA SAYS AMERICA WILL WIN ‘THE SECOND SPACE RACE’ AGAINST CHINA
NASA’s new moon rocket lifts off from Launch Pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2022. This launch is the first flight test of the Artemis program. (John Raoux/AP Photo)
The mission is scheduled to lift off from Launch Complex 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida aboard the Space Launch System, the most powerful rocket the agency has ever built.
Preparations are underway to begin moving the rocket to the launch pad no earlier than Jan. 17. The move involves a four-mile journey from the Vehicle Assembly Building to Launch Pad 39B aboard the crawler-transporter 2, a process expected to take up to 12 hours.
“We are moving closer to Artemis II, with rollout just around the corner,” Lori Glaze, acting associate administrator for NASA’s Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate, said. “We have important steps remaining on our path to launch and crew safety will remain our top priority at every turn, as we near humanity’s return to the Moon.”
TRANSPORTATION SECRETARY DUFFY TO ANNOUNCE NUCLEAR REACTOR DEVELOPMENT PLAN FOR THE MOON

The crew of NASA’s Artemis II mission (left to right): NASA astronauts Christina Hammock Koch, Reid Wiseman (seated), Victor Glover, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen. (NASA)
The 322-foot rocket will send four astronauts beyond Earth orbit to test the Orion spacecraft in deep space for the first time with a crew aboard, marking a major milestone following the Apollo era, which last sent humans to the Moon in 1972.
The crew includes NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, along with Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen, making Artemis II the first lunar mission to include a Canadian astronaut and the first to carry a woman beyond low Earth orbit.
After launch, the astronauts are expected to spend about two days near Earth checking Orion’s systems before firing the spacecraft’s European-built service module to begin the journey toward the Moon.
BLUE ORIGIN LAUNCHES NEW GLENN ROCKET TO MARS AFTER DELAYS

A full moon was visible behind the Artemis I SLS (Space Launch System) rocket and Orion spacecraft at Launch Complex 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on June 14, 2022. The first in an increasingly complex series of missions, Artemis I tested SLS and Orion as an integrated system prior to crewed flights to the Moon. (NASA/Ben Smegelsky)
That maneuver will send the spacecraft on a four-day trip around the far side of the Moon, tracing a figure-eight path that carries the crew more than 230,000 miles from Earth and thousands of miles beyond the lunar surface at its farthest point.
Instead of firing engines to return home, Orion will follow a fuel-efficient free-return path that uses Earth and Moon gravity to guide the spacecraft back toward Earth during the roughly four-day return trip.
The mission will end with a high-speed reentry and splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego, where NASA and Department of War teams will recover the crew.
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Artemis II follows the uncrewed Artemis I mission and will serve as a critical test of NASA’s deep-space systems before astronauts attempt a lunar landing on a future flight.
NASA says the mission is a key step toward long-term lunar exploration and eventual crewed missions to Mars.
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NASA Finally Weighs In on the Origin of 3I/ATLAS
After the prolonged shutdown of the US government, NASA has finally started its nonessential work back up. It’s starting off with a bang: The agency called a press conference to show its hitherto reserved images of the interstellar object 3I/ATLAS. NASA scientists also confirmed that 3I/ATLAS is in fact a comet, contrary to the speculations about alien technology flooding the internet.
During the broadcast, a panel of scientists showed the results of observations obtained by different NASA missions across various points in the journey 3I/ATLAS has taken. Each provided insights in the infrared, visible, ultraviolet, and gamma-ray spectrums, providing a better understanding of the true nature of 3I/ATLAS.
Among the most relevant data are images captured by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and MAVEN satellites, as well as those from the Psyche and Lucy space probes, and even from the SOHO solar probe. The scientists clarified that all the data will be publicly available for anyone to investigate.
3I/ATLAS Images Shared by NASA
SOHO: Image From the Sun-Monitoring Probe
This orange-toned photo comes from NASA. The SOHO probe that monitors the sun managed to capture 3I/ATLAS between October 15 and 26. In the words of the agency, this image was a surprise. They did not expect that the object could be seen from so far away, 358 million kilometers.
MRO: One of the Best Close-Ups of 3I/ATLAS
One of the most anticipated photos of the comet is the one obtained by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter satellite in October, when 3I/ATLAS approached at “only” 29 million kilometers. NASA finally shared it. The image shows the frozen body surrounded by a cloud of characteristic dust ejected as the comet approached the sun.
STEREO: The Photo Confirming the Shape of 3I/ATLAS
The STEREO observatory analyzes the behavior of the sun. To get at least one coherent image of the comet, scientists had to stack several images taken at different exposures. In the end, the interstellar object was revealed as a bright orb against a noisy background.
MAVEN: A Glimpse of Comet Hydrogen
MAVEN is a Mars orbiter. Its lens captured this ultraviolet spectrum image of 3I/ATLAS before it reached its closest approach to the Red Planet. It shows hydrogen emitted from different sources. The portion on the left belongs to the comet’s signature.
PUNCH: Another Solar Glimpse
PUNCH is a polarimeter that monitors the sun’s corona and its heliosphere. However, its lenses made it possible to visualize the comet’s tail for weeks from October to September. In this animation, each frame represents a daily snapshot, while the streaks in the background are produced by the movement of the stars.
On December 19, 2025, the comet will reach its closest point to Earth. It will pass at a completely safe distance: about 267 million kilometers away. To put that in perspective, it’s equivalent to almost 700 times the distance between the Earth and the moon, and 1.8 times the separation between our planet and the sun. This flyby will have no effect on the Earth.
Both NASA and other space agencies are expected to initiate additional observing campaigns to capture better photographs and relevant information about the third confirmed interstellar object in history.
This story originally appeared in WIRED en Español and has been translated from Spanish.
Jorge Garay
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Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket set for Mars mission from Florida’s Space Coast
Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket is set to launch from Kennedy Space Center on Thursday.The launch window opens at 2:57 p.m. and closes at 4:25 p.m., following delays due to space weather conditions.Over the last hour and a half, crews have begun loading propellant onto the New Glenn.The launch was postponed on Wednesday due to highly elevated solar activity, which can be hazardous for rockets. This activity is a result of geomagnetic storms that also produce the aurora, also known as the northern lights. Sunday’s launch was also scrubbed due to adverse weather conditions on the ground.This mission is pivotal for Blue Origin, as Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy hinted that NASA might select a different company for its Artemis III mission, which aims to return humans to the moon. Duffy suggested that Blue Origin could potentially replace SpaceX for this mission.Dr. Ken Kremer, a research chemist, said, “I think they have an excellent chance to get this contract.”Dr. Don Platt from Florida Tech emphasized the importance of the mission’s success, stating, “The most important thing is to make sure the escapade spacecraft is on the trajectory to Mars and so they’re able to put that into the proper orbit. Anything short of that is not a success.”Blue Origin will also monitor recovery weather conditions, as they aim to land the booster, a feat they did not attempt during their first launch in February. >> WESH 2 will stream the launch in the video player above.
Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket is set to launch from Kennedy Space Center on Thursday.
The launch window opens at 2:57 p.m. and closes at 4:25 p.m., following delays due to space weather conditions.
Over the last hour and a half, crews have begun loading propellant onto the New Glenn.
The launch was postponed on Wednesday due to highly elevated solar activity, which can be hazardous for rockets.
This activity is a result of geomagnetic storms that also produce the aurora, also known as the northern lights. Sunday’s launch was also scrubbed due to adverse weather conditions on the ground.
This mission is pivotal for Blue Origin, as Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy hinted that NASA might select a different company for its Artemis III mission, which aims to return humans to the moon.
Duffy suggested that Blue Origin could potentially replace SpaceX for this mission.
Dr. Ken Kremer, a research chemist, said, “I think they have an excellent chance to get this contract.”
Dr. Don Platt from Florida Tech emphasized the importance of the mission’s success, stating, “The most important thing is to make sure the escapade spacecraft is on the trajectory to Mars and so they’re able to put that into the proper orbit. Anything short of that is not a success.”
Blue Origin will also monitor recovery weather conditions, as they aim to land the booster, a feat they did not attempt during their first launch in February.
>> WESH 2 will stream the launch in the video player above.
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Ariana Grande Shades Kim Kardashian Over Moon Landing Denial: ‘F**k Off’ – Perez Hilton
Ariana Grande is getting defensive over this — even if it means getting shady!
Last year, the pop-star-turned-actress sat down with Wicked co-lead Cynthia Erivo for Vanity Fair’s lie detector test. During a series of rapid-fire questions, Cynthia asked her if she believes the moon landing was faked. At the time, the NASA singer responded:
“Jesus Christ! What do you take me for? No. No!”
However, the polygraph technician reported the results came back “inconclusive” — which she was shocked to hear.
Related: Kim Kardashian & Kris Jenner SNUB Meghan Markle & Prince Harry!
Fast forward to now! On Tuesday, the 32-year-old appeared in another installment of Vanity Fair’s lie detector test — this time alongside Wicked: For Good costar Bowen Yang. And while the polygraph technician was strapping her into the machine, she broke the ice by declaring:
“I wanna make sure you’re getting the truth this time, because I feel a little bit like we have some air to clear. For me, that moon thing doesn’t sit well with me, because I think sometimes I get nervous.”
She questioned if the machine is “picking up truth or lie” or just “waves of panic,” before clarifying she is NOT one of these conspiracy theorists out here saying we didn’t land on the moon:
“The moon landing has happened … and f**k off if it didn’t.”
Ha! Clearly she saw how the internet reacted last time! Well, she may not even have known it, depending on when the test video was filmed… but she was, perhaps inadvertently, stepping into another controversy by trying to get out of that one!
See, just the other day Kim Kardashian addressed the very same question during a Season 7 episode of The Kardashians, where she confidently admitted to All’s Fair co-star Sarah Paulson she totally believes the moon landing “didn’t happen.”
So when Ari is telling all the conspiracy nuts to eff off… Oops! Talking to Kim Kardashian, as it turns out! Ha!
Hilariously, later in the test Bowen did ask a question about the flag “planted on the moon.” Ariana had enough this time, shouting exasperatedly:
“You know, I hear both arguments … the truth is, I don’t give a rat’s ass. I’m worried about Earth, god damnit! We’re burning alive! We’re killing each other! Can we worry about Earth for five minutes? Who gives a f**k about the moon and the flag?”
HA!
You can watch more from the lie detector test (below):
Perez Hilton
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NASA pushes back after Kim Kardashian claims moon landing was fake during reality show appearance
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Kim Kardashian doesn’t believe America made it to the moon in 1969, and NASA is hitting back.
On the most recent episode of “The Kardashians,” the reality TV star attempted to convince Sarah Paulson the moon landing never happened.
On Apollo 11, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins became the first humans on the moon in 1969. The flight was a defining moment in the space race between America and the Soviet Union.
Kim Kardashian believes the 1969 moon landing was fake. (Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Academy Museum of Motion Pictures)
Only 12 men, all Americans, have walked on the moon.
KIM KARDASHIAN SAYS SOMEONE ‘EXTREMELY CLOSE’ TO HER PUT OUT A HIT ON HER LIFE
“I’m sending you, so far, a million articles with both Buzz Aldrin and … the other one,” she told Paulson, referring to Neil Armstrong.
“Yes, do it,” Paulson said on the episode that aired Thursday night.
“This girl says, ‘What was the scariest moment?’ And [Aldrin] goes, ‘There was no scary moment, cause it didn’t happen. It could’ve been scary, but it wasn’t, cause it didn’t happen,’” Kardashian said.
According to Kardashian, the astronaut has “gotten old” and makes mistakes when discussing the famous moon landing.
“So, I think it didn’t happen,” Kardashian concluded.

Sarah Paulson admitted to going on a “massive deep dive” after hearing Kardashian’s take. (Getty Images)
Paulson, Kardashian’s “All’s Fair” co-star, admitted Kardashian’s take on the moon landing made her take a “massive deep dive.” During a confessional moment of the reality show, Kardashian admitted she sends Paulson “conspiracies all the time.”
A producer of the show followed up with Kardashian when she was back in her trailer and asked her if she believed astronauts made it to the moon.
“I don’t think we did. I think it was fake.”
“I don’t think we did. I think it was fake,” she said.
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“I’ve seen a few videos [of] Buzz Aldrin talking about how it didn’t happen. He says it all the time now in interviews.”
Kardashian continued to defend her claim.

Kim Kardashian believes astronaut Buzz Aldrin has been making mistakes when recounting the trip due to old age. (Dimitrios Kambouris)
“Why does Buzz Aldrin say it didn’t happen? There’s no gravity on the moon. Why is the flag blowing? The shoes that they have in the museum that they wore on the moon [have] a different [foot]print than the photos. Why are there no stars?” she asked.
On Thursday, NASA acting Administrator Sean Duffy took to X, formerly Twitter, to reassure Kardashian that, yes, Americans have made it to the moon.
“Yes, Kim Kardashian, we’ve been to the Moon before… 6 times!” he wrote, tagging the star. Duffy explained that, thanks to President Donald Trump, America is back in the space race with NASA Artemis.
“And even better: @NASAArtemis is going back under the leadership of @POTUS. We won the last space race and we will win this one too,” Duffy wrote alongside the clip of Kardashian and Paulson on the reality show.
Kardashian replied to Duffy’s post, “Wait…. what’s the tea on 3I Atlas?!?!!!!!!!?????”
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During the show, a producer asked Kardashian what she would think if people reacted to her theory.

Kim Kardashian doesn’t care what people think about her theory. (Phillip Faraone)
“They’re gonna say I’m crazy no matter what. But, like, go to TikTok. See for yourself,” she said.
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Astronomers Have Discovered Earth’s Latest Quasi-Lunar Moon
The Earth has just added its seventh confirmed quasi-lunar moon. It is 2025 PN7, a small Apollo-type asteroid detected in August solely by its brightness, thanks to the Hawaiian Pan-STARRS 1 telescope.
After analyzing its trajectory, scientists concluded that the object maintains a 1:1 resonance with the Earth. In other words, it orbits the sun at the same time as our planet. From a distant perspective, this synchronicity makes it look as if the Earth is accompanied by a tiny asteroid—as if it had an additional moon.
Unlike the moon, quasi-lunar moons are not gravitationally bound to the Earth. They are ephemeral companions, in cosmological terms, following their own path around the sun. Only at certain times do they come close enough to appear bound. In the case of 2025 PN7, its minimum distance is 299,000 kilometers, while at its farthest point it can reach 17 million km. For comparison, the moon remains at an average distance of 384,000 km from Earth.
According to the article published in Research Notes of the AAS, the asteroid has been in a quasi-satellite phase since 1965, and is expected to remain so for 128 years. Some researchers estimate that 2025 PN7 will finally move away in 2083.
Why Does the Earth Have Quasi-Lunar Moons?
So far, seven bodies have been confirmed that appear to accompany the planet in its orbit. Astronomers believe that more may be discovered in the future. Earth is a natural reservoir of quasi-lunars because the Earth’s orbit is similar to that of certain nearby objects that inhabit the so-called Arjuna group of asteroids, a population that has only recently begun to be studied in greater detail.
The Arjuna group does not form a ring like the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, but comprises a legion of near-Earth rocks that orbit the sun on a similar path as our planet. Occasionally, some of these asteroids coincide with our trajectory and, depending on their orbital dynamics, are classified as quasi-lunar or mini moons.
The quasilunar moon 2025 PN7 sits in the Arjuna asteroid group not far from Earth.Illustration: WIRED
Jorge Garay
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Living in giant moon glass spheres could be our future
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One day, we might see glowing cities of glass scattered across the Moon’s surface, shining softly under Earth’s light. NASA is teaming up with Skyeports, a California-based company, to explore how lunar dust could be turned into massive glass spheres strong enough to live in. These futuristic, transparent habitats could become the first real homes for astronauts on the Moon.
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Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts, and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox. Plus, you’ll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide — free when you join my CYBERGUY.COM newsletter.Skyeports’ vision begins with melting lunar dust in microwave furnaces to create durable glass. (Skyeports)
Turning moon dust into homes
Skyeports has developed a way to transform lunar dust, known as regolith, into durable glass that can be shaped into massive spheres. Using a microwave furnace, the regolith melts and expands like a bubble before cooling into a hard, transparent shell. These spheres could one day serve as living and working spaces for astronauts.
The innovation lies in building directly on the Moon using local materials. No costly shipments from Earth are required. The same pipes used to blow the molten glass will become entrances, while 3D printers inside the spheres will create furniture and fittings using lunar materials.
SPACE STARTUP UNVEILS 1-HOUR ORBITAL DELIVERY SYSTEM

The spherical glass design evenly spreads pressure, forming strong, transparent habitats that can withstand micrometeorites and extreme lunar conditions. (Skyeports)
Self-healing and solar-powered living
The planned glass spheres go far beyond simple shelters. They are designed as self-sustaining ecosystems. The glass can repair small cracks caused by micrometeorites or moonquakes, and built-in solar panels will allow each habitat to generate its own energy.
Inside, temperature layers could create condensation to support plant growth. This would produce oxygen, water and food, making each sphere a self-contained life-support system.
The science behind the glass sphere design
The spherical shape is more than a design choice. It evenly distributes pressure, giving the structure incredible strength. By adding elements like titanium, magnesium and calcium, the glass becomes even tougher and stronger than steel.
Dr. Martin Bermudez, CEO of Skyeports, shared that current prototypes are only a few inches wide, but future spheres could stretch up to 1,640 feet across. His long-term vision is a network of glass cities connected by transparent bridges across the lunar landscape.
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NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts program supports this research as part of its push to prepare for long-term human life on the Moon under the Artemis mission. (Skyeports)
Future plans to test glass sphere habitats on the moon
This concept is part of NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts program, which funds forward-thinking projects that could transform future missions. With the Artemis program aiming to return humans to the Moon soon, finding safe and sustainable habitats is a top priority.
The Skyeports team plans to test the glassblowing technique in a thermal vacuum chamber, followed by parabolic flight experiments that simulate microgravity. Future trials are scheduled aboard the International Space Station to see how the process performs in real space conditions. If all goes well, tests on the lunar surface could happen within the next few years.
What this means for you
The idea behind these lunar glass spheres reaches far beyond space exploration. It represents a new approach to sustainable design, one that could reshape how we build on Earth. The same techniques could lead to eco-friendly, energy-efficient buildings for our own planet’s future. If these glass structures can protect astronauts from extreme lunar conditions, they might inspire a new generation of sustainable architecture here at home.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
NASA’s partnership with Skyeports feels like the start of something big. It shows that life beyond Earth is moving from imagination to reality. The mix of science, design, and creativity behind these glass habitats could be the first real step toward building lasting communities on the Moon. Humanity is learning how to move from exploring space to actually living there.
Would you choose to live in a glass city on the Moon if you had the chance? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com
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NASA’s Boss Just Shook Up the Agency’s Plans to Land on the Moon
Duffy also cites “maybe others” getting involved. This refers to a third option. In recent weeks, officials from traditional space companies have been telling Duffy and the chief of staff at the Department of Transportation, Pete Meachum, that they can build an Apollo Lunar Module–like lander within 30 months. Amit Kshatriya, NASA’s associate administrator, favors this government-led approach, sources said.
On Monday, in a statement to Ars, a Lockheed Martin official confirmed that the company was ready if NASA called upon them.
“Throughout this year, Lockheed Martin has been performing significant technical and programmatic analysis for human lunar landers that would provide options to NASA for a safe solution to return humans to the moon as quickly as possible,” said Bob Behnken, vice president of exploration and technology strategy at Lockheed Martin Space. “We have been working with a cross-industry team of companies, and together we are looking forward to addressing Secretary Duffy’s request to meet our country’s lunar objectives.”
NASA would not easily be able to rip up its existing human lander system contracts with SpaceX and Blue Origin, as, especially with the former, much of the funding has already been awarded for milestone payments. Rather, Duffy would likely have to find new funding from Congress. And it would not be cheap. This NASA analysis from 2017 estimates that a cost-plus, sole-source lunar lander would cost $20 billion to $30 billion, or nearly 10 times what NASA awarded to SpaceX in 2021.
SpaceX founder Elon Musk, responding to Duffy’s comments, seemed to relish the challenge posed by industry competitors.
“SpaceX is moving like lightning compared to the rest of the space industry,” Musk said on the social media site he owns, X. “Moreover, Starship will end up doing the whole moon mission. Mark my words.”
The Timing
Duffy’s remarks on television on Monday morning, although significant for the broader space community, also seemed intended for an audience of one—President Trump.
The president appointed Duffy, already leading the Department of Transportation, to lead NASA on an interim basis in July. This came six weeks after the president, for political reasons, rescinded his nomination of billionaire and private astronaut Jared Isaacman to lead the space agency.
Eric Berger, Ars Technica
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The 10 Best Sci-Fi Movies About Artificial Intelligence
They’re plagiarizing your homework! They’re ripping off your art! They’re probably you’re stealing your data right now! Are they the tech bros in training that sat behind you in undergrad? No, but good guess! They’re AIs. And for better or for worse, they’re here to stay. Scientists and sci-fi writers alike have been dreaming and warning of a future when synthetic intelligence has integrated into modern society, and that future is here! To celebrate (and commiserate) the rise of our robot overlords in training, here’s a list of the 10 best sci-fi movies about artificial intelligence – so when the end times come, you’ll be prepared.
Ghost In The Shell

(Production IG) Hailed as one of the greatest animated films ever made, Mamoru Oshii’s Ghost In The Shell is a seminal sci-fi anime that spawned an entire franchise – and a sea of imitators. Set in the cyberpunk metropolis of New Port City, the action follows Motoko Kusanagi, a public security agent who is also a full cyborg. Made entirely of machine parts, the only thing human that remains of Motoko is her “ghost” – the in-universe word for the soul. While hunting down a renegade hacker calling himself “The Puppet Master,” Motoko battles with explosive rounds and explosive philosophical questions alike. What is the nature of human consciousness? Can a digital soul without a body be considered human at all? When two consciousnesses merge, is the self annihilated or assimilated? While light on modern depictions of AI, the film instead focuses on the merging of the synthetic and the organic. The human the robot. The ghost and the machine.
Her

(Warner Bros.) Do you ever feel like ChatGPT is a better listener than your friends and lovers? If that’s the case, you might be interested in a product called the OS – the romantic co-lead of Spike Jonze sci-fi slowburn opus Her. The plot follows Theodore Twombly, who, like you, is fed up with human relationships and is looking to dip a toe in the synthetic dating pool. After purchasing a copy of OS (and answering a few questions about his relationship to his mother) the AI within, like a romance robot genie, wakes up and names herself Samantha. And so begins a marriage of man and machine like you’ve never seen before. Woefully romantic, the film relies entirely on verbal conversation (and some verbal sexy stuff) to portray a deeply intimate love affair between a lonely man and a synthetic woman that is slowly developing a voice of her own.
Ex Machina

(A24) Alex Garland’s Ex Machina is the stuff tech bro wet dreams are made of – and maybe nightmares too. The story begins with programmer grunt Caleb Smith, who wins an office sweepstakes to spend a week with Blue Book CEO Nathan Bateman. After arriving at Bateman’s palatial home, Caleb is introduced to Ava – a woman Bateman keeps locked up in his basement. It’s not a hostage situation (yet) Ava is an AI – Turing tested, and almost Blue Book approved. Nathan wants Caleb to help him determine if Ava is truly conscious – but not in the way that he thinks. What starts as a simple android/human meet cute quickly devolves into a full blown conspiracy as Ava attempts to convince Caleb to help her escape. But is she doing it out of love for Caleb? Hatred for Nathan? Or maybe something even more deeply human and individualistic: the innate desire for freedom. It was good enough for William Wallace, must be good enough for Ava too.
Blank

(Sparky Pictures) An underrated artificial diamond in the rough, Natalie Kennedy’s Blank is the story of Claire Rivers, writer who draws a *title drop* blank whenever she sits down to work on her next project. She agrees to go on a writer’s retreat run by an AI, but this isn’t some some summer cabin with ChatGPT booted up on a laptop, this robot expects literary greatness, and due to a catastrophic malfunction, is ready to push Claire to the limit in order to achieve it. It’s essentially Stephen King’s Misery if instead of a Maine-coded writer held captive by Kathy Bates with a sledgehammer, it was the story of a young woman being tormented by an evil android with a slew of creative torture techniques. Maybe artistic greatness really does come from misery and pain? Claire’s gonna have lots of ideas after this ordeal is over.
Blade Runner

(Warner Bros.) Adapted from Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep into the stuff of sci-fi cinema legend, Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner is the story of AI gone rogue. In a dystopian future, a mega-corporation has engineered synthetic people called “replicants,” originally created to supplement the workforce. After gaining self-awareness (as sci-fi AIs are wont to do) the replicants escape into society at large, and it’s up to “blade runners” like Rick Deckard to hunt them down and terminate them. Like Ex Machina, Blade Runner is a film about machines with an innate desire to be free – who are willing to kill for it. Trouble for the replicants is, Deckard is all willing to kill too.
2001: A Space Odyssey

(Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer) Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is one of the most critically lauded sci-fi films of all time, and one of the most important films ever made. While the rest of us might have gotten a little lost while this heady film explored its heady themes, we were found again with the introduction of HAL 9000 – one of the scariest film antagonists of all time. The robotic poster child for the “evil malfunctioning machine” trope, HAL 9000 lies, manipulates and even kills for the good of the mission – not good for the spaceship crew it manages. The most chilling part of the film is the question of HAL self awareness. Is it truly an unthinking and unfeeling machine following programming? Or is HAL consciousness that, like us, has wants and dreams and fears to die? It’s this unanswered question that gives the film its power. Is Hal misunderstood? Or a master robot gaslighter? Maybe a bit of both.
Moon

(Sony) Direct by Duncan Jones, Moon stars Sam Rockwell, along with Sam Rockwell, with a supporting cast of Sam Rockwells and a special guest appearance from Sam Rockwell himself. A lone maintenance worker on the moon, Samuel Bell is just about to finish his three year work contract and then he’s free to go home to his family. After crashing a lunar rover, he awakens and overhears a suspicious conversation between GERTY, the facility AI, and his corporate handlers. Sam later discovers the unconscious body of himself at the crash site, and the pair begin to wonder just how real their memories, their families, and their realities really are. It’s an emotionally charged film that subverts the “evil AI” trope – GERTY really is just trying to help, the only way it’s programmed how.
The Matrix

(Warner Bros.) Directed by the Wachowskis, The Matrix isn’t a film – it’s a full blown cultural phenomenon. One of the most groundbreaking movies of all time, the plot follows “chosen one” Neo who discovers that he and everyone he knows are living in a simulation. The ultimate trans allegory, The Matrix is a film about awakenings – realizing that everything you thought you knew about yourself and society is wrong. There are a multitude of AI characters in the film and its later sequels, including the iconic Agent Smith – a renegade program with a personal vendetta against Neo. One of the top ten sci-fi films ever made, The Matrix is as relevant as ever.
WALL-E

(Pixar) An animated dystopian sci-fi romance, Andrew Stanton’s WALL-E is one of Pixar’s most challenging films to date. On an ecologically dead Earth, a lone trash collector robot named WALL-E works tireless to clean up a world destroyed by human greed and neglect. After a meetcute with EVE – robot designed to scan for signs of life – WALL-E short circuits with love. After hitching a ride with EVE back to a spaceship carrying the remnants of the human race, WALL-E discovers a world where mankind has regressed into unhealthy and technologically dependent adult-babies. WALL-E is a film where the robots are more human than humanity itself – by staying plugged in, mankind has disconnected from each other entirely. It’s only robots forming meaningful relationships these days, and robots that will repair humanity’s relationship with the world they left behind.
Metropolis

(Parufamet) Featuring one of the oldest depictions of artificial intelligence in film, Fritz Lang’s Mertropolis is a German expressionist classic. Set in a retro-futuristic dystopia, the film follows Freder, the wealthy and indolent son of an oligarch, in his quest to liberate the city’s working class from subterranean squalor. Out of the goodness of his heart? No, in order to impress Maria, a woman he just met. While Maria has been championing the rights of the working class for years, her newfound support from Freder has made the situation for the upper class untenable. In order to sow seeds of destruction, Freder’s father commissions one of his scientists to build a duplicate Maria out of machine parts – to fool and foil the revolution from the inside. Part Bladerunner, part Romeo and Juliet, part Arcane, this sci-fi still holds up almost a century later.
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Sarah Fimm
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Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin Wins Contract to Take NASA Rover to the Moon
NASA’s VIPER lunar rover could be delivered to the moon by Blue Origin, Jeff Bezos’ aerospace company. The US space agency has awarded the company a task order to design a delivery plan for the rover, with a future delivery option.
The award, worth $190 million, was issued through NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program, which the agency is using to buy delivery services to the moon from private companies. The award does not directly imply a delivery agreement; first, NASA will verify whether Blue Origin is capable of successfully sending the expensive VIPER rover to the moon’s south pole. To be eligible to take on the VIPER delivery, the company must place its Blue Moon MK1 lunar lander—complete with a NASA technology payload—on the lunar surface by the end of 2025.
Blue Origin won this contract to send cargo to the moon in 2023, and designed the Blue Moon MK1 in order to fulfil it. On this mission, it will carry NASA stereo cameras that will conduct surface surveys, in addition to small spheres equipped with laser technology for mission tracking.
“There is an option on the contract to deliver and safely deploy the rover to the Moon’s surface. NASA will make the decision to exercise that option after the execution and review of the base task and of Blue Origin’s first flight of the Blue Moon MK1 lander,” the agency said in a statement.
On the same day as NASA announced the award, Blue Origin wrote on X: “Our second Blue Moon MK1 lander is already in production and well-suited to support the VIPER rover. Building on the learnings from our first MK1 lander, this mission is important for future lunar permanence and will teach us about the origin and distribution of water on the Moon.”
VIPER—which stands for Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover—has been designed by NASA scientists to explore the moon’s south pole for ice and other resources of interest. It is about 2.5 meters tall, weighs nearly 500 kilograms, and has a one-meter drill and three scientific instruments. The vehicle had been scheduled to launch in 2023, only for that date to be pushed back. Then, in the face of rising costs and further delays, in July 2024 NASA said it had cancelled the mission. The CLPS award to Blue Origin now appears to have revived the program.
The arrival of private space companies has the potential to reduce the traditional costs of space exploration while allowing mission managers to focus on scientific issues. Blue Origin, Firefly Aerospace, and SpaceX are just some of the companies that have emerged in this sector and won CLPS contracts with NASA.
“NASA is leading the world in exploring more of the Moon than ever before, and this delivery is just one of many ways we’re leveraging US industry to support a long-term American presence on the lunar surface,” said acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy in a statement. “Our rover will explore the extreme environment of the lunar South Pole, traveling to small, permanently shadowed regions to help inform future landing sites for our astronauts and better understand the Moon’s environment—important insights for sustaining humans over longer missions, as America leads our future in space.”
This story originally appeared on WIRED en Español and has been translated from Spanish.
Jorge Garay
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In a race back to the moon, U.S. and China see a fast-approaching finish line
WASHINGTON — Early in his first term, President Trump held a modest ceremony directing NASA to return humans to the moon for the first time in 50 years. It was a goalpost set without a road map. Veterans of the space community reflected on the 2017 document, conspicuously silent on budgets and timelines, equivocating between excitement and concern.
Was Trump setting up a giveaway to special interests in the aerospace community? Or was he setting forth a real strategic vision for the coming decade, to secure American leadership in the heavens?
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It was a return to a plan first proposed by President George W. Bush in 2004, then abandoned by President Obama in 2010, asserting the moon as a vital part of American ambitions in space. Whether to return to the lunar surface at all — or skip it to focus on Mars — was a long-standing debate governing the division of resources at NASA, where every project is precious, holding extraordinary promise for the knowledge of mankind, yet requiring consistent, high-dollar funding commitments from a capricious Congress.
Eight years on, the debate is over. Trump’s policy shift has blazed a new American trail in space — and spawned an urgent race with China that is fast approaching the finish line.
Both nations are in a sprint toward manned missions to the lunar surface by the end of this decade, with sights on 2029 as a common deadline — marking the end of Trump’s presidency and, in China, the 80th anniversary of the People’s Republic.
A “What Will 2030 Look Like?” sign behind Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, who chairs the Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee, during a confirmation hearing in April.
(Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
It is a far different race from the original, against the Soviet Union, when U.S. astronauts inspired the world with a televised landing in 1969. This time, Washington would not just plant a flag and return its astronauts home. Instead, the Americans plan to stay, establishing a lunar base that would test humanity’s ability to live beyond Earth.
China has similar plans. And with both countries aiming for the same strategic area of the surface — the south pole of the moon, where peaks of eternal light shine alongside crevices of permanent darkness, believed to store frozen water — the stakes of the race are grounded in national security. Whichever nation establishes a presence there first could lay claim to the region for themselves.
The world’s first full-scale model of the crewed pressurized lunar rover, to be used in the Artemis moon exploration program, is displayed during a press preview in July.
(Kazuhiro Nogi/AFP via Getty Images)
Advocates of the U.S. effort, called the Artemis program, increasingly fear that delays at NASA and its private sector partners, coupled with proposed funding cuts to NASA from the Trump administration, could ensure China’s victory in a race with broad consequences for U.S. interests.
So it is a race that Trump started. The question is whether he can finish it.
While U.S. intelligence officials have assessed that Beijing is on track to meet its goals, NASA veterans say that accomplishing a manned mission before the Chinese appears increasingly out of reach.
“It’s a stretch,” said G. Scott Hubbard, a leader in human space exploration for the last half-century who served as NASA’s first “Mars czar” and former director of the Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif. “Bottom line, yes, it is doable. It’ll take an intense effort by the best engineers, and appropriate funding.
“It’s not inconceivable,” he added.
Visitors take photos of a space suit during an event marking China’s Space Day at the Harbin Institute of Technology in Harbin, capital of northeast China’s Heilongjiang province.
(Wang Jianwei/Xinhua via Getty Images)
The White House said Trump is committed to making “American leadership in space great again,” noting his first-term push to return U.S. astronauts to the moon and his efforts to deregulate the U.S. space industry. But officials declined to comment on a timeline for the mission or on China’s steady progress.
“Being first and beating China to the moon matters because it sets the rules of the road,” Sean Duffy, Transportation secretary and acting NASA administrator, told The Times. “We’re committed to doing this right — safely, peacefully, and ahead of strategic competitors — because American leadership on the moon secures our future in space.”
The success of the Artemis program, Duffy said, is about ensuring the United States leads in space for generations to come. “Those who lead in space lead on Earth,” he added.
NASA officials, granted anonymity to speak candidly, expressed concern that while leadership on the Artemis program has remained relatively stable, talent on robotics and in other key areas has left the agency at a critical time in the race, with potentially less than two years to go before China launches its first robotic mission to the south pole — a scout, of sorts, for a manned landing to follow.
A proposal to cut NASA research funding by roughly 47% has gripped officials there with doubt, jeopardizing a sense of job security at the agency and destabilizing a talent pipeline that could prove critical to success.
In the 1960s, the federal government increased spending on NASA to 4.4% of GDP to secure victory in the first space race.
“There’s too much uncertainty,” one NASA official said, raising the specter of the Trump administration impounding funds for the agency even if Congress continues to fund it.
Inside NASA headquarters, Hubbard said, “the feeling right now is terrified uncertainty — everyone is walking on eggshells.”
“They’re treading water,” he added. “People want to be given clear direction, and they’re not getting it.”
A Chinese Smart Dragon-3 rocket carrying satellites lifts off from sea on Sept. 9.
(VCG/VCG via Getty Images)
China’s long march gets closer
Beijing conducted a series of tests over the last several weeks viewed in Washington as crucial milestones for China on its journey to the moon.
A launch of its Lanyue lander, equipped to carry two taikonauts to the lunar surface, “validated” its landing and takeoff system, state media reported. Two subsequent tests of China’s Long March 10, a super-heavy lift rocket designed to jump-start the mission, were a “complete success,” according to the China Manned Space Agency.
Unlike in the United States, China’s manned space flight program is housed within its military.
“We have seen them steadily progress on all of the various pieces that they are going to need,” said Dean Cheng, senior advisor to the China program at the U.S. Institute of Peace.
“You need a vehicle to launch, because current rockets simply don’t have enough throw-weight. They’re testing the lander to carry astronauts to the surface,” Cheng said. “These are key pieces, and significant advances — this is a brand new rocket and a lunar lander with new technology.”
China initially set a goal for its manned mission by 2035, but has since moved up its plans, an expression of confidence from Beijing and an unusual break from typical party protocol. Now, China aims not only to have completed that mission, but to begin establishing an International Lunar Research Station on its surface, in conjunction with Russia, by 2030.
They are expected to target the south pole.
“There’s room for two powers under schemes of coordination, but there’s not room in an uncoordinated environment. There can easily be a competition for resources,” said Thomas González Roberts, an assistant professor of international affairs and aerospace engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
Landing and takeoff of spacecraft on the moon will kick up lunar dust and rocks, risking the safety of astronauts on the ground and sensitive equipment across a base site — considerations that are likely driving Beijing’s strategy to get there first. Those enjoying the benefits of first arrival could set up generous routes for rovers, equipment at dig sites for deposits, telecommunication assets, and even a nuclear reactor to assert a large area of domain.
Since his first term, Trump and his aides have sought to avoid a showdown on the lunar surface, drafting a new set of international rules to govern an otherwise untamed frontier. The Artemis Accords “set out a practical set of principles to guide space exploration,” according to the State Department. President Biden embraced and extended the initiative, growing the list of signatories to 56 nations.
But China is not one of them, prohibited by Congress during the Obama era from cooperating with the United States in space after attempting to steal U.S. technology on intercontinental ballistic missiles and thermonuclear weapons. Instead, Beijing has recruited a small list of countries to join its lunar base program, including Russia, Venezuela, Pakistan, Egypt, Nicaragua, Belarus and South Africa.
“I don’t think there will be extreme congestion on the moon, but if you really define an area of interest — and there is that, with these peaks of eternal light next to permanently shadowed regions — you could manufacture congestion,” Roberts added.
“How do you benefit from obfuscation?” he asked. “If you’re the first arrival, you spread yourself out.”
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from launch pad 40 at Cape Canaveral, carrying Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus XL cargo spacecraft toward the International Space Station.
(Manuel Mazzanti/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
The promise and burden of Musk’s Starship
Last month, Duffy warned NASA staff that the Trump administration suspects Beijing is planning to deliver a nuclear reactor to power a long-term presence at its lunar base by 2029.
The move, Duffy said, could allow China to “declare a keep-out zone, which would significantly inhibit the United States from establishing a planned Artemis presence if not there first.” He ordered the agency to collect proposals by October on delivering a U.S. reactor to the surface no later than that year.
The administration’s success relies on a man whose relationship with Trump has crashed spectacularly to Earth.
Starship, a super heavy-lift launch vehicle produced by Elon Musk’s SpaceX, is the rocket Trump is relying on to accomplish the Artemis mission. Yet repeated setbacks in the Starship program have raised alarm at NASA over its fundamental constitution. A concerning series of tests have already delayed the U.S. manned launch, known as Artemis III, toward the end of Trump’s term.
Last month, in its 10th test flight, the rocket finally succeeded in a suborbital mission. But “Starship has yet to reach orbit,” Hubbard said, “and once it reaches orbit, they’ve got to demonstrate microgravity transfer of cryogenic propellant.”
“That’s something that’s never been done before,” he added. “So to say that they’ll be ready to do all of that in two years is a real stretch.”
Setbacks are common course in the history of the U.S. space program. But the success of China’s recent tests has shown the Trump administration that NASA and its partners have run out of time for further delays.
Duffy said that Artemis II, a manned mission to orbit the moon, will take place early next year, overcoming a separate set of design flaws that faced Lockheed Martin’s Orion spacecraft. Artemis III would keep astronauts on the surface for more than a week and deliver payloads to help begin the foundation of a base.
Whether the Trump administration will commit to the funding and leadership necessary for the mission is an open question. The White House declined to say who within the West Wing is leading the effort. Trump has not named a permanent NASA administrator for Senate confirmation.
Success on the moon is meant to provide a testing ground and a launching pad for more ambitious, challenging manned missions to Mars. But Trump’s commitment to those ventures are equally in doubt. The administration has proposed canceling funds for a landmark program decades in the making to return samples from the red planet, despite a NASA announcement last week revealed it had discovered signs of ancient Martian life.
“I’ve been on the inside of it — you waste enormous amounts of time just trying to find workarounds to get funding in to stay on schedule,” Hubbard said. “If you really, really want to beat the Chinese, give NASA the funding and some stability — because you’re not going to beat them if every day, week or month, there’s a different direction, a different budget, a different administrator.
“And China may still win,” he said, adding: “It would be another claim that they’re the dominant power in the world.”
Michael Wilner
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‘We risk losing the moon to China’ NASA space race continues amid U.S. funding concerns
NON-RENEWAL. WE ARE STILL WAITING TO HEAR BACK. WE’LL KEEP YOU POSTED. OUR LEADERSHIP IN SPACE IS UNDER THREAT. THAT IS THE WARNING TODAY FROM TOP NASA OFFICIALS AND A FORMER NASA ADMINISTRATOR. THAT’S RIGHT. WESH 2’S SPACE COAST REPORTER MEGHAN MORIARTY IS LIVE FOR US RIGHT NOW WITH THE CLEAR MESSAGE FROM THOSE LEADERS. CHINA IS SURGING. SUMMER AND NANCY. THE MESSAGE WAS CLEAR WITHOUT A SUCCESSFUL AND FULLY FUNDED ARTEMIS PROGRAM, WE RISK LOSING THE MOON TO CHINA. HOWEVER, THERE ARE STILL CONCERNS AROUND THE SETBACKS AND THE EXCESSIVE COST TIED TO SPACE EXPLORATION. IT’S GETTING DOWN TO THE WIRE IN THE COUNTRY THAT LANDS ON THE MOON. NEXT, COULD HOLD THE POWER SHAPING THE RULES OF SPACE FOR DECADES TO COME. THEIR INTENT IS CLEAR. THEIR PROGRESS IS REAL, AND TIME IS NOT ON OUR SIDE. THIS IS A RACE THAT THE UNITED STATES CANNOT AFFORD TO LOSE. DURING A SENATE COMMITTEE MEETING ON WEDNESDAY, KEY WITNESSES TESTIFIED BEFORE LAWMAKERS URGING THEM NOT TO CUT BACK FUNDING FOR SPACE EXPLORATION. THIS COMES AFTER CRITICISM OVER THE EXCESSIVE COST AND DELAYS IN COMPONENTS FOR NASA’S ARTEMIS PROGRAM. WE’RE TALKING ABOUT NOW AN AGENCY THAT HAS LESS THAN ONE THIRD OF 1% OF THE FEDERAL BUDGET. AND, BY THE WAY, IF YOU GO BACK TO APOLLO, IT WAS SOMEWHERE BETWEEN 4 AND 5%. SO WE ARE SIGNIFICANTLY SMALLER. MOST NOTABLY, WE HEARD FROM FORMER NASA ADMINISTRATOR JIM BRIDENSTINE, WHO ACKNOWLEDGED THE CONCERNS OVER MONEY BUT SAYS THE PROGRAM IS ESSENTIAL NOT JUST TO BEAT CHINA TO THE MOON, BUT FOR OVERALL SCIENTIFIC DEVELOPMENT. WE HAD A DRUG, A MERCK DRUG, KEYTRUDA, WHICH IS FOR LUNG CANCER, AND WE WERE ABLE TO TO MAKE THAT DRUG SO THAT INSTEAD OF INSTEAD OF TRYING TO FIND OUT IF WITHIN 2 OR 3 MONTHS, IF IT’S GOING TO BE EFFICACIOUS, YOU CAN FIND OUT WITHIN 2 TO 3 WEEKS WHETHER OR NOT IT’S GOING TO BE EFFICACIOUS. FORMER NASA ADMINISTRATOR NOMINEE JARED ISAACMAN ALSO WEIGHED IN ON X, SAYING IN PART, IT IS GOOD TO SEE NASA GETTING SOME WELL-DESERVED ATTENTION, BUT ADDING THAT WE SHOULD BE ASKING WHY TAXPAYERS HAVE SPENT 100 PLUS BILLION TRYING TO RETURN TO THE MOON, SAYING THE SLS IS EXTRAORDINARILY EXPENSIVE AND ORION HAS ISSUES. THE SUITS ARE NOT READY AND THE LANDERS ARE NOT READY. ISAACMAN ALSO HIGHLIGHTED THAT NASA CAN GET HELP FROM PRIVATE INDUSTRY. SO THIS WAY THE TAXPAYER ISN’T FRONTING MOST OF THE COST. NOW, WHILE THIS IS AN IMPORTANT DISCUSSION THAT WILL CONTINUE, IT SEEMS TO BE CLEAR THAT THERE ALSO NEEDS TO BE SOME BACKUP PLANS IN PLACE. ANOTHER COMMITTEE MEETING IS NOT ON THE SCHEDULE JUST YET.
‘We risk losing the moon to China’ NASA space race continues amid U.S. funding concerns
Updated: 7:02 PM EDT Sep 3, 2025
As the race to land on the moon intensifies, key witnesses are urging U.S. lawmakers not to cut funding for NASA’s Artemis program, emphasizing the importance of beating China to the moon and advancing scientific development.Allen Cutler, president and CEO of the Coalition for Deep Space Exploration, stressed the urgency of the situation. “Their intent is clear. Their progress is real, and time is not on our side. This is a race that the United States cannot afford to lose,” Cutler said.During a Senate committee meeting on Wednesday, witnesses addressed concerns over the excessive costs and delays in components for NASA’s Artemis program. Former NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine acknowledged these concerns but emphasized the program’s significance.”We’re talking about now an agency that has less than one-third of one percent of the federal budget. And by the way, if you go back to Apollo, it was somewhere between 4 and 5 percent, so we are significantly smaller,” Bridenstine said.Bridenstine also highlighted the scientific benefits of the Artemis program, citing advancements in medical research. “We had a drug merk drug Keytruda, which is for lung cancer and we were able to make that drug so that instead of trying to find out within two to three months if it’s going to be efficacious. You can find out within two to three weeks if it’s going to be efficacious,” he said.Former NASA administrator nominee Jared Isaacman shared his views on the social media platform X, expressing mixed feelings about NASA’s current situation.”It is good to see NASA getting some well-deserved attention,” Isaacman said, but he also questioned the financial investment. “We should be asking why taxpayers have spent $100+ billion trying to return to the Moon,” he said, pointing out issues with the Space Launch System, Orion, and other components.
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. —As the race to land on the moon intensifies, key witnesses are urging U.S. lawmakers not to cut funding for NASA’s Artemis program, emphasizing the importance of beating China to the moon and advancing scientific development.
Allen Cutler, president and CEO of the Coalition for Deep Space Exploration, stressed the urgency of the situation. “Their intent is clear. Their progress is real, and time is not on our side. This is a race that the United States cannot afford to lose,” Cutler said.
During a Senate committee meeting on Wednesday, witnesses addressed concerns over the excessive costs and delays in components for NASA’s Artemis program. Former NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine acknowledged these concerns but emphasized the program’s significance.
“We’re talking about now an agency that has less than one-third of one percent of the federal budget. And by the way, if you go back to Apollo, it was somewhere between 4 and 5 percent, so we are significantly smaller,” Bridenstine said.
Bridenstine also highlighted the scientific benefits of the Artemis program, citing advancements in medical research. “We had a drug merk drug Keytruda, which is for lung cancer and we were able to make that drug so that instead of trying to find out within two to three months if it’s going to be efficacious. You can find out within two to three weeks if it’s going to be efficacious,” he said.
Former NASA administrator nominee Jared Isaacman shared his views on the social media platform X, expressing mixed feelings about NASA’s current situation.
“It is good to see NASA getting some well-deserved attention,” Isaacman said, but he also questioned the financial investment. “We should be asking why taxpayers have spent $100+ billion trying to return to the Moon,” he said, pointing out issues with the Space Launch System, Orion, and other components.
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Trippy Image From Deep Space Shows Earth and Moon From 180 Million Miles Away
The Psyche spacecraft is on a six-year journey to reach a metal-rich asteroid by the same name. Well into its voyage, the probe looked back at its home planet and captured a rare view of Earth, accompanied by its Moon, as a mere speck engulfed by the dark void of space.
NASA’s Psyche mission launched on October 13, 2023, and is assigned to explore a distant target in the main asteroid belt that’s believed to be the exposed core of a protoplanet. Before it reaches its destination, the imaging team behind the mission is testing the spacecraft’s ability to capture objects that shine by light reflected from the Sun. The target objects of these tests are awfully familiar—our very own planet and moon—but they were taken from a rather unfamiliar perspective.
In July, scientists on the imaging team snapped multiple, long-exposure photos of Earth and the Moon. The pair is seen amidst a dark background littered with several stars in the constellation Aries. Earth appears as a bright dot, with the Moon sitting right above it. The image was taken from about 180 million miles (290 kilometers) away and offers a rare look at our planet as seen from deep space.
The photo brings the famous Pale Blue Dot to mind, an image of Earth captured by the Voyager 1 spacecraft in 1990. That image was taken from a distance of 3.7 billion miles (6 billion kilometers), with Earth appearing as a mere speck amid the cosmic backdrop.
Although it wasn’t captured from the same distance, Psyche’s recent image is a similar reminder of Earth’s place and size in the solar system. The spacecraft is equipped with a pair of cameras, designed to collect pictures in wavelengths of light that are both visible and invisible to the human eye, to help determine the composition of the metal-rich asteroid.
Psyche needs to travel a total of around 2.2 billion miles to reach the main asteroid belt and enter asteroid Psyche’s orbit in late July 2029. The 173-mile-wide (280-kilometer) asteroid orbits the Sun in the outer part of the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Scientists believe the space rock might be an exposed core of a planetesimal, or an early planetary building block, which was stripped of its outer layer during the early formation of the solar system.
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Liftoff: NASA’s Europa Clipper Sails Toward Ocean Moon of Jupiter
NASA’s Europa Clipper has embarked on its long voyage to Jupiter, where it will investigate Europa, a moon with an enormous subsurface ocean that may have conditions to support life.
The spacecraft launched at 12:06pm EDT Monday aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket from Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Central Florida.
The largest spacecraft NASA ever built for a mission headed to another planet, Europa Clipper also is the first NASA mission dedicated to studying an ocean world beyond Earth. The spacecraft will travel 1.8 billion miles (2.9 billion kilometers) on a trajectory that will leverage the power of gravity assists, first to Mars in four months and then back to Earth for another gravity assist flyby in 2026. After it begins orbiting Jupiter in April 2030, the spacecraft will fly past Europa 49 times.
“Congratulations to our Europa Clipper team for beginning the first journey to an ocean world beyond Earth,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “NASA leads the world in exploration and discovery, and the Europa Clipper mission is no different. By exploring the unknown, Europa Clipper will help us better understand whether there is the potential for life not just within our solar system, but among the billions of moons and planets beyond our Sun.”
Approximately five minutes after liftoff, the rocket’s second stage fired up and the payload fairing, or the rocket’s nose cone, opened to reveal Europa Clipper. About an hour after launch, the spacecraft separated from the rocket. Ground controllers received a signal soon after, and two-way communication was established at 1:13pm with NASA’s Deep Space Network facility in Canberra, Australia. Mission teams celebrated as initial telemetry reports showed Europa Clipper is in good health and operating as expected.
“We could not be more excited for the incredible and unprecedented science NASA’s Europa Clipper mission will deliver in the generations to come,” said Nicky Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Everything in NASA science is interconnected, and Europa Clipper’s scientific discoveries will build upon the legacy that our other missions exploring Jupiter — including Juno, Galileo, and Voyager — created in our search for habitable worlds beyond our home planet.”
The main goal of the mission is to determine whether Europa has conditions that could support life. Europa is about the size of our own Moon, but its interior is different. Information from NASA’s Galileo mission in the 1990s showed strong evidence that under Europa’s ice lies an enormous, salty ocean with more water than all of Earth’s oceans combined. Scientists also have found evidence that Europa may host organic compounds and energy sources under its surface.
If the mission determines Europa is habitable, it may mean there are more habitable worlds in our solar system and beyond than imagined.
“We’re ecstatic to send Europa Clipper on its way to explore a potentially habitable ocean world, thanks to our colleagues and partners who’ve worked so hard to get us to this day,” said Laurie Leshin, director, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “Europa Clipper will undoubtedly deliver mind-blowing science. While always bittersweet to send something we’ve labored over for years off on its long journey, we know this remarkable team and spacecraft will expand our knowledge of our solar system and inspire future exploration.”
In 2031, the spacecraft will begin conducting its science-dedicated flybys of Europa. Coming as close as 16 miles (25 kilometers) to the surface, Europa Clipper is equipped with nine science instruments and a gravity experiment, including an ice-penetrating radar, cameras, and a thermal instrument to look for areas of warmer ice and any recent eruptions of water. As the most sophisticated suite of science instruments NASA has ever sent to Jupiter, they will work in concert to learn more about the moon’s icy shell, thin atmosphere, and deep interior.
To power those instruments in the faint sunlight that reaches Jupiter, Europa Clipper also carries the largest solar arrays NASA has ever used for an interplanetary mission. With arrays extended, the spacecraft spans 100 feet (30.5 meters) from end to end. With propellant loaded, it weighs about 13,000 pounds (5,900 kilograms).
In all, more than 4,000 people have contributed to Europa Clipper mission since it was formally approved in 2015.
“As Europa Clipper embarks on its journey, I’ll be thinking about the countless hours of dedication, innovation, and teamwork that made this moment possible,” said Jordan Evans, project manager, NASA JPL. “This launch isn’t just the next chapter in our exploration of the solar system; it’s a leap toward uncovering the mysteries of another ocean world, driven by our shared curiosity and continued search to answer the question, ‘are we alone?’”
Europa Clipper’s three main science objectives are to determine the thickness of the moon’s icy shell and its interactions with the ocean below, to investigate its composition, and to characterize its geology. The mission’s detailed exploration of Europa will help scientists better understand the astrobiological potential for habitable worlds beyond our planet.
Managed by Caltech in Pasadena, California, NASA JPL leads the development of the Europa Clipper mission in partnership with the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The main spacecraft body was designed by APL in collaboration with NASA JPL and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, and NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. The Planetary Missions Program Office at Marshall executes program management of the Europa Clipper mission.
NASA’s Launch Services Program, based at NASA Kennedy, managed the launch service for the Europa Clipper spacecraft.


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