In close partnership with NASA and space exploration company Intuitive Machines, Columbia has developed two textiles that can withstand extreme conditions.
Its Omni-Heat Infinity and Omni-Shade Sun Deflector will protect the Athena space ship from the harsh elements on the moon.
The Columbia fire department has been without a building to call their own since hurricane Michael. Now, while city officials ...
Tal Ramon, son of Ilan Ramon who died on board Space Shuttle Columbia, speaks during a ceremony marking the NASA Day of Remembrance at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex on Thursday, Jan. 23 ...
NASA and Fortify are working together to create more accessible, low-cost 3D printed antennas with electromagnetic properties ...
An annual safety report to NASA has both praise and also underscores a number of cautionary woes, including the space ...
Columbia Sportswear (COLM) continues to test the limits of its innovative technologies by expanding its partnership with space exploration ...
Columbia Sportswear and Intuitive Machines Expand Scientific Partnership with Upcoming Lunar Mission
Columbia’s Omni-Heat™ Infinity and Omni ... advancing our shared commitment to human exploration on Earth and beyond.” As part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (“CLPS ...
A group of 13 MSU students have been selected to help NASA design interface solutions as they seek to colonize the moon with ...
NASA's Apollo 1, Challenger and Columbia tragedies remind Andrew Allen of the science fiction movie "The Day the Earth Stood Still," where Americans later recall what they were doing and what they ...
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson stepped down ... Previously, he flew aboard the space shuttle Columbia on the STS-61C mission in 1986. In addition to making progress on Artemis, Nelson’s term ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results