STS-135 mission coverage


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Medical issue leads to early return of Crew-11
Posted: Sun, Jan 11 5:18 PM ET (2218 GMT)
Crew-11 before launch (SpaceX) For the first time in the agency’s history, NASA is ending a crewed mission early because of a medical issue. NASA announced Thursday that the four members of Crew-11 will return to Earth in the “coming days” on their Crew Dragon spacecraft after one of them suffered an unspecified medical issue Wednesday. NASA did not disclose who suffered the issue or other details, but said the person was stable and that the issue was not serious enough to require an immediate emergency evacuation from the station. They added that the medical issue was not related to preparations for a spacewalk that was scheduled for Thursday but called off by the incident. NASA is looking to potentially moving up the Crew-12 mission, currently planned to launch as soon as mid-February. However, the agency expects that for at least a few weeks the ISS will be operated by a three-person crew, including one NASA astronaut, who arrived at the station in November on a Soyuz.


Private organization plans large space telescope
Posted: Sun, Jan 11 5:14 PM ET (2214 GMT)
Lazuli space telescope (Schmidt Sciences) A billionaire-backed philanthropic organization is funding development of a large space telescope. Schmidt Sciences announced Wednesday its plans for Lazuli, a space telescope with a mirror three meters across, larger than Hubble. Lazuli will be equipped with a camera, spectrograph and coronagraph for observing exoplanets. The organization plans to develop Lazuli rapidly, with a launch as soon as 2028, and at a “ridiculously” low price in the hundreds of millions of dollars, a tenth of the cost of NASA flagship astrophysics missions. Schmidt Sciences is also developing three ground-based observatories to operate in conjunction with Lazuli. The organization is funded by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and his wife Wendy; Eric Schmidt is also an investor in and CEO of launch company Relativity Space.


ULA sets date for next Vulcan launch
Posted: Sun, Jan 11 5:09 PM ET (2209 GMT)
The next Vulcan launch comes as a transitional time for both the rocket and United Launch Alliance. The USSF-87 launch, scheduled for Feb. 2,...


Minibus spending bill provides $24.4 billion for NASA
Posted: Sun, Jan 11 5:07 PM ET (2207 GMT)
A final fiscal year 2026 spending bill released by appropriators Monday largely rejects proposed steep budget cuts at NASA. House and Senate appropriators released the...


AE Industrial Partners to taker majority stake in L3Harris power and propulsion business
Posted: Sun, Jan 11 5:05 PM ET (2205 GMT)
Private equity firm AE Industrial Partners is buying a controlling stake in the space power and propulsion business of L3Harris. The companies announced a deal...





Sunday, January 11
Scientists Use JWST to Examine Ancient Monster Stars That May Reveal the Birth of Black Holes
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics — 6:16 pm ET (2316 GMT)
Young Galaxies Grow Up Fast
Caltech — 6:15 pm ET (2315 GMT)
Stars That Die Off the Beaten Path
NRAO — 6:15 pm ET (2315 GMT)
Young Galaxies Grow Up Fast
NRAO — 6:14 pm ET (2314 GMT)
NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory Spots Record-Breaking Asteroid in Pre-Survey Observations
National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory — 6:06 pm ET (2306 GMT)
Voyager Awarded NASA HUNCH Contract
Voyager Space — 6:00 pm ET (2300 GMT)
An Act of Cosmic Sabotage
The Atlantic — 5:59 pm ET (2259 GMT)





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