Joined the talented people of @NASAStennis for their annual crawfish boil.
This tradition brings together the people, families, and partners behind some of the hardest engineering challenges in the world.
Grateful to everyone helping make our return to the Moon, Mars, and beyond possible.
“It’s great to be with you in the people’s house.”
This week, NASA’s Artemis II crew visited the U.S. Capitol to speak with lawmakers, congressional staff, and special guests about their historic 10-day mission around the Moon and back.
And, yes, Rise was there too!
Credit: NASA/Max van Otterdyk
A great visit to Los Alamos National Laboratory, one of America’s premier scientific institutions.
From advanced computing to nuclear science, national security, and space exploration, the work happening here helps push the boundaries of what’s possible. NASA’s future nuclear-powered missions to the Moon, Mars and beyond will depend on the kind of research and engineering brilliance that places like Los Alamos deliver every day.
Grateful for the opportunity to meet with the incredible team helping keep the United States at the forefront of technological leadership.
Last week, we took the mission to the heart of New York City. The Artemis II crew showed the country what’s next. America is ready to go back to the Moon. Artemis II is just the beginning. 🌕
Today, we welcomed 20 engineers and technicians as NASA civil servants, the first cohort onboarded under our workforce directive.
This is how we strengthen NASA, bringing critical expertise in-house, restoring technical depth, and ensuring we’re operating with the speed, accountability, and excellence the mission demands.
For the first time in 50 years, humans flew to the Moon and came back. Today, we rang the Opening Bell to celebrate it. 🌕 @nasa@nasaadmin Jared Isaacman joined us at the NYSE to honor the @nasaartemis II mission - and everyone who made humanity’s return to lunar orbit possible.
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is in final preparations for an early September launch, eight months AHEAD of schedule and UNDER budget.
This milestone is the result of more than a decade of dedication and millions of hours of work by NASA and our industry partners. Their commitment is what’s making this moment possible and helping drive Gold Standard Science.
Roman will help answer some of the biggest questions in science, investigating dark matter, dark energy, and the structure of the universe. Its images will be so large and detailed, there isn’t a screen in existence big enough to display them.
This is just the beginning.