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New York CNN —Elon Musk, the world’s richest person, will be taking on an official role to try to help President-elect Donald Trump make government more efficient. It will add yet another responsibility to an ever-growing to-do list for the increasingly distracted CEO and business leader. Tesla, Musk’s most valuable company, in recent years has struggled to maintain its dominance of the electric vehicle market. Of course, that’s if Trump and Musk remain on good terms. And no matter how much power and influence Musk could yield, Trump will hold the ultimate trump card: He’ll be president.
Persons: New York CNN — Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Musk, Tesla, Trump, , Dan Ives, Ives, , it’s, ” Ives, He’ll Organizations: New, New York CNN, SpaceX, Boring, EV, Wedbush Securities, Trump White House, Tesla, Trump, Bloomberg, Boeing, Fidelity, Twitter Locations: New York, China
CNN —Three of the astronauts who were unexpectedly hospitalized after returning from the International Space Station in late October are set to discuss their mission during a NASA news conference. NASA astronauts Michael Barratt, Matthew Dominick, and Jeanette Epps are expected to field questions. The group includes (from left) Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin and NASA astronauts Michael Barratt, Matthew Dominick and Jeanette Epps. NASA ultimately chose to send back the Boeing spacecraft empty and moved Starliner’s astronauts onto the SpaceX Crew-9 mission, delaying the launch of that mission. Astronauts commonly extend their stay aboard the space station for days, weeks or even months as unexpected events arise.
Persons: NASA’s, Michael Barratt, Matthew Dominick, Jeanette Epps, Alexander Grebenkin, , Barratt, Dominick, Epps, Grebenkin, Gregg Newton, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams, Frank Rubio, Rubio’s Organizations: CNN, International Space Station, NASA, NASA’s Johnson Space Center, SpaceX, , Getty, Boeing, Crew Locations: Houston, Russian, Florida, AFP
Tech billionaire Elon Musk and his business empire stand to reap massive rewards if former President Donald Trump returns to the White House. Elon Musk joins former US President Donald Trump during a campaign event in Butler, Pa., on Oct. 5, 2024. “I love Elon Musk,” Trump said at a rally in July. It’s not clear how Musk and Trump would navigate the ethical questions around a possible government role for the tech billionaire. “He would be in much less trouble in a Trump administration because Trump shares his hostility to regulation and regulators,” Richard Pierce, a law professor at George Washington University specializing in government regulation, told NBC News in an interview earlier this year.
Persons: Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Musk, Trump, Vladimir Putin, SpaceX, ” Musk, Brian Hughes, , ” Hughes, Justin Merriman, ” Trump, , walling, Kamala Harris, Harris, Biden, Larry Krasner, ” Richard Pierce, John Raoux, Angela Aneiros, ” Aneiros, Tesla, There’s, SpaceX countersued, • Tesla, ” SpaceX, Starlink, Justice Department —, Tucker Carlson, Carlson, he’s, SpaceX’s, Kamala Organizations: Tech, Trump, Musk’s, SpaceX, China —, U.S, Wall Street, NBC News, Boeing, Fox News, Bloomberg, Getty Images Trump, D.C, Trump Organization, Budget, America PAC, Philadelphia, George Washington University, Tesla, Co, Kennedy Space Center, Gonzaga University, university’s Center of Law, & Commerce, Justice Department, National, Traffic Safety Administration, Securities and Exchange Commission, Street, Justice, Employment, Commission, National Labor Relations Board, SEC, Twitter, Federal Communications Commission, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Safety, Health Administration, NLRB, Reuters, Defense Department, NASA, International, White, National Space Council Locations: China, United States, Taiwan, Ukraine, Washington, Trump’s, Pennsylvania, Butler, Pa, Palm Beach , Florida, Texas, California, Cape Canaveral, Fla, Los Angeles, Austin, Mars
Boeing is looking for a $19 billion boost
  + stars: | 2024-10-28 | by ( Aditi Bharade | Pete Syme | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +3 min
Boeing is looking to raise nearly $19 billion to combat its lack of cash. It comes after Boeing reported a net loss of $6.1 billion in the third quarter. AdvertisementBoeing needs cash, and it's trying to raise almost $19 billion as the company looks to boost its liquidity. The planemaker announced Monday that it is offering 90 million common shares and about $5 billion of depositary shares for sale. Last Wednesday, Boeing reported a net loss of $6.1 billion in its third-quarter earnings.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Max, Dave Calhoun, Ron Epstein Organizations: Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Service, planemaker, Bank of America, Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, Alaska Airlines Boeing
Astronomers have never detected dark matter, but they believe it makes up about 85% of the total matter in the universe. Meanwhile, the existence of dark energy helps researchers explain why the universe is expanding — and why that expansion is speeding up. A prime example is the European Space Agency’s wide-angle Euclid telescope that launched in 2023 to investigate the riddles of dark energy and dark matter. Euclid this week delivered the first piece of a cosmic map — containing about 100 million stars and galaxies — that will take six years to create. These stunning 3D observations may help scientists see how dark matter warps light and curves space across galaxies.
Persons: Jackie Wattles, I’m, Vera C, Sarah Gillis, John Kraus, Chenyang Cai, Everest, NASA hasn’t, gazers, Ashley Strickland, Katie Hunt Organizations: CNN, ESA, US National Science Foundation, Stanford University, Rubin, SpaceX, SpaceX Polaris, Polaris, NASA, Boeing, CNN Space, Science Locations: Chile, Uzbekistan, Norway, Myanmar, Florida
A NASA astronaut was flown to a hospital with an unspecified medical issue on Friday shortly after returning to Earth from a nearly eight-month mission on the International Space Station, the space agency said. The astronaut, who NASA did not name for privacy reasons, had splashed down off Florida’s coast at 3:29 a.m. ET on Friday aboard SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule with three other crew members — two NASA astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut. Their 235 days in space made it longer than the usual six-month ISS mission duration and marked the longest stay in orbit for SpaceX’s reusable Crew Dragon spacecraft. The Elon Musk-owned company remains the only U.S. option for NASA astronaut trips to and from the ISS.
Persons: SpaceX’s, Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, Jeanette Epps, Alexander Grebenkin, , Roscosmos, Elon, Starliner, Richard Jones, Jones, William Gerstenmaier Organizations: NASA, Station, SpaceX, ISS Locations: Russian, Pensacola , Florida, Houston, Ascension, Pensacola, U.S, Gulf of Mexico
The four-person crew, which spent nearly eight months aboard the International Space Station before landing in the Gulf of Mexico on Friday at 3:29 a.m. However, the astronauts “were taken to a local medical facility for additional evaluation,” NASA news chief Cheryl Warner said in a statement from the space agency shared at 8 a.m. “Out of an abundance of caution, all crew members were flown to the facility together.”Warner confirmed at 9 a.m. ET that the crew was still at the medical facility, but did not provide details about the nature of the medical checks. Additional weather delays also pushed the Crew-8 astronauts’ return into late October.
Persons: Cheryl Warner, ” Warner, Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, Jeanette Epps, Alexander Grebenkin, Roscosmos —, , Richard Jones, NASA’s, “ They’ll, ” Jones, Organizations: CNN, NASA, SpaceX, Space, International Space, Boeing Locations: Florida, Houston , Texas, Gulf of Mexico, Gulf, Houston
Boeing has recorded another $250 million loss on its Starliner program. Boeing has lost $1.85 billion on the Starliner program to date. AdvertisementAerospace manufacturer Boeing said on Wednesday that it was incurring an additional $250 million charge against earnings on its beleaguered Starliner program. This is in addition to the $125 million charge against earnings Boeing recorded in the second quarter of this year. Boeing has lost $1.85 billion on the Starliner program to date.
Persons: Kelly Ortberg, , Starliner, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams, Wilmore, Williams, Ortberg, Boeing's Organizations: Boeing, New, Service, Aerospace, Space, NASA, SpaceX, SEC, Ortberg, Business Insider, Max, Airlines, Wednesday Locations: New Mexico, Oregon, California
SpaceX's Crew-8 from right to left: NASA astronauts Jeanette Epps, Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin. Williams and Wilmore, for the record, have now been on the space station more than 18 weeks. The SpaceX Dragon Endeavour spacecraft is pictured beyond the Candarm2 robotic arm moments after undocking from the Harmony module of the space station with four Crew-8 members. And NASA previously confirmed the Starliner astronauts are prepared to make such a shift. Extended stays in spaceIt’s not uncommon for astronauts to unexpectedly extend their stay aboard the space station — for days, weeks or even months.
Persons: Suni Williams, Butch Wilmore —, Williams, Wilmore, Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, Jeanette Epps, Alexander Grebenkin, Roscosmos, SpaceX Williams, That’s, Wilmore —, Cardman, Stephanie Wilson —, Boeing’s Starliner, they’re, , Dana Weigel, “ Butch, Suni, ” Weigel, , Nick Hague, Russia’s Aleksandr Gorbunov, ” Williams, Frank Rubio, yearlong, “ I’m Organizations: CNN, International Space Station, NASA, SpaceX, ISS, SpaceX's, Cape Canaveral Space Force, SpaceX’s, Spaceflight, Boeing, Expedition, Space Station Locations: Florida, Russian
The summary Three NASA astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut left the International Space Station on Wednesday after weeks of delays. After weeks of delays due to inclement weather, three astronauts and a cosmonaut left the International Space Station on Wednesday, wrapping up an almost eight-month stint in orbit. NASA astronauts Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt and Jeanette Epps and Russian cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin departed the space station at 5:05 p.m. Had Crew-8 departed at the original time, that would have left astronauts without a way to get home should an urgent problem arise. Members of the group that departed the space station Wednesday spent their time there conducting research, scientific experiments and assisting with visiting spacecraft, including the problem-plagued Starliner.
Persons: Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, Jeanette Epps, Alexander Grebenkin, Hurricane Milton, Dominick, Barratt, Epps, Grebenkin, Butch Wilmore, Sunita Williams —, Nick Hague, Aleksandr Gorbunov —, Williams Organizations: NASA, SpaceX, Kennedy Space, Station Locations: Russian, Milton, Hurricane, Florida, Merritt Island, Fla
watch nowQuarterly lossesBoeing reported a more than $6 billion loss for the third quarter, its largest since 2020 when the pandemic halted most aircraft demand and its bestselling airplane was grounded after two crashes. It disclosed charges of more than $5 billion across its commercial and defense units and said it ended the third quarter with $10.5 billion in cash and marketable securities. Its commercial airplane unit's losses swelled to more than $4 billion from a $678 million loss a year before. Ortberg announced the departure of the defense unit's CEO, Ted Colbert, in September. He is expected to face questions on the call about which units or projects the company will consider shedding.
Persons: David Ryder, Kelly Ortberg, Ortberg, CNBC's Squawk, Brian West, Ted Colbert, we've, LSEG, Rockwell Collins, Max, weren't Organizations: Boeing Co, Bloomberg, Getty, Boeing, KC, International, NASA, CNBC, Alaska Airlines Locations: Renton , Washington, US
That is the Boeing unit that has been the most troubled, but the strike affected only the last two weeks of the three-month period. Boeing reported a $2.4 billion operating loss in its space and defense business, which is not affected by the strike. “First and foremost on everybody’s mind today is ending the IAM strike,” Ortberg told investors. Members of the International Association of Machinists from Boeing hold a march during an ongoing strike in Seattle, on October 15. Fortunately for Boeing, it is not likely it will be forced out of business by its current financial crisis.
Persons: Kelly Ortberg, ” Ortberg, “ We’re, We’ve, , , Starliner, , Ortberg, Seth Seifman, Seifman, David Ryder, “ We’ve, Max Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, International Association of Machinists, CNBC, International, Station, NASA, SpaceX, IAM, JPMorgan Chase, Reuters, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, Airbus Locations: New York, , Seattle, Washington
Boeing and union leaders have reached a deal that could end a weekslong strike. AdvertisementBoeing and leaders from a union representing striking machinists have reached a deal that could end a strike that has lasted over a month. About 33,000 Boeing workers have been on strike in the Pacific Northwest for over a month, halting much of Boeing's production. Bank of America analysts estimated that the strike is costing Boeing $50 million a day. Less than a week after the strike began, Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg said the company would furlough white-collar workers in an email to employees.
Persons: , Labor Julie Su, who've, Kelly Ortberg, Ortberg Organizations: Boeing, Service, International Association of Machinists, Aerospace Workers, Labor, Bank of America, Federal Aviation Administration, Alaska Airlines, Space Station Locations: Pacific Northwest
NASA is planning to give the Boeing Starliner another chance. The agency has scheduled two SpaceX launches — Crew-10 and Crew-11 — for 2025. AdvertisementNASA has released the schedule for its commercial launches in 2025, and the Boeing Starliner is slated to get another chance at spaceflight. Advertisement"Meanwhile, NASA is keeping options on the table for how best to achieve system certification, including windows of opportunity for a potential Starliner flight in 2025," it added. The duo are scheduled to return via the SpaceX Crew Dragon in February 2025.
Persons: Starliner, , Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers, Russia's Roscosmos, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams, Williams, Elon Musk, NASA didn't Organizations: NASA, Boeing, SpaceX, , Service, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, International, Station, Starliner, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Business Locations: New Mexico
Boeing said it has entered a $10 billion credit agreement with four banks, it said in a filing Tuesday. In a separate filing, the planemaker said may also sell up to $25 billion in securities. AdvertisementBoeing plans to raise up to $35 billion to help steady its finances as a machinists' strike enters its fifth week. In a Tuesday regulatory filing, the planemaker said it had entered a $10 billion credit agreement with Bank of America, Citibank, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan Chase. Boeing also filed a prospectus stating that it may sell up to $25 billion in securities, including bonds, new shares, and stock options.
Persons: planemaker, , Goldman Sachs, Ron Epstein, Julie Su, Sir Tim Clark, Max midflight, Dave Calhoun, Kelly Ortberg, Starliner Organizations: Boeing, Service, Bank of America, Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, Business, CNN, Anderson Economic Group, Labor, Emirates, Alaska Airlines, Space, NASA, SpaceX Locations: Seattle
That includes researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), who are developing a set of wearable robotic limbs to help astronauts recover from falls. When the wearer falls over, an extra pair of limbs can extend out to provide leverage to help them stand, conserving energy for other tasks. The study found that falls were more common when, like Duke, astronauts were collecting samples or using tools – tasks that Artemis astronauts are likely to undertake. Kim Shiflett/NASA NASA astronaut Eric Boe wears Boeing's new spacesuit designed for astronauts who will fly on the CST-100 Starliner. Ballesteros plans to spend the next few years of his PhD using a “Swiss Army Knife technique” to turn SuperLimbs into a system for astronauts that can “address different important use cases, but all be one unified design.”SuperLimbs could help astronauts recover from falls, move efficiently, and do work.
Persons: haven’t, Artemis, Charlie Duke, Duke, Walter M, Schirra Jr, Donald K, Slayton, John H, Glenn Jr, Scott Carpenter, Alan B, Shepard Jr, Virgil I, Grissom, Gordon Cooper Jr, John W, Michael Collins, Edwin E, Aldrin Jr, Buzz Aldrin, Neil A, Armstrong, Aldrin, Joe Engle, Richard Truly, John Young, Bruce McCandless, McCandless, Robert L, Stewart, Michael J, McCulley, Franklin R, Chang, Diaz, Ellen S, Baker, Shannon W, Donald E, Williams, Michael Fincke, Yury Lonchakov, Kennedy, Center's Neil A, Jessica Watkins, Bob Hines, Kjell Lindgren, Samantha Cristoforetti, Kim Shiflett, Eric Boe, Boeing Dustin Gohmert, NASA's, Joel Kowsky, NASA Kristine Davis, SuperLimbs, Harry Asada, Erik Ballesteros, Ballesteros, it’ll, , Jonathan Clark, ” Ballesteros, Ana Diaz Artiles, Kalind Carpenter, Preston Rogers, Mirza Samnani Organizations: CNN, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, University of Michigan, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA, Mercury, Command, NASA Space Shuttle, Challenger, NASA's, NASA NASA, Russian Sokol, International Space, SpaceX, Armstrong Operations, Boeing, Orion, Space, Space Center, Extravehicular Mobility, UPI, Jet Propulsion, SuperLimbs, Neurology, Space Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas, Swiss Locations: Tranquility, Russian, Washington ,, Washington, Japan, Mars . China
Union members are still angry that Boeing demanded they give up their traditional pension plans 10 years ago, when the company was doing well financially. Even with all of its problems, Boeing is likely at no risk of disappearing. If airlines that are Boeing customers cancel their order, they would have to wait five years for a comparable jet from Airbus. Boeing will discontinue that plane once its current orders are completed and delivered to customers in 2027. That plane is built by some of the union members now on strike.
Persons: , , Kelly Ortberg, ” Ortberg, Max, Ortberg, Poor’s Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, National Transportation Safety Board, Space Station, International Association of Machinists, IAM, Airbus Locations: New York, United States, underperformance, Washington State
Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp, left, and founder Jeff Bezos look up at a New Glenn rocket on at the company's LC-36 facility in Florida. Blue OriginDave Limp had only one question for Jeff Bezos when he interviewed last year to become CEO of Blue Origin, the billionaire's space venture. "Jeff felt that [Blue Origin] needed manufacturing expertise; it needed decisiveness; it need a little bit of energy," Limp said. CEO Dave Limp, third from the left, with Blue Origin employees at the company's New Glenn facility in Florida. In the mission's place, Blue Origin will fly a demonstration of its spacecraft Blue Ring on the first New Glenn launch.
Persons: Dave Limp, Jeff Bezos, Jeff, Limp, Bezos, It's, I'm, New Glenn, Allen Parker, Jennifer Pena, Leanos, Ian Richardson, Tim Collins, it's, Origin's, ULA, Paul Hennessy, Glenn, We've, Starliner, Shepard, Blue, let's Organizations: Glenn, Florida ., Amazon, CNBC, Blue, SpaceX, United Launch Alliance, Lab, Firefly Aerospace, Company, NASA, Amazon Devices, Flexport, Vulcan, Cape Canaveral Space Force, Anadolu, Getty, New Glenn, Falcon, Shepard, National Security, Washington , D.C Locations: Florida, New, Mars, Seattle, Kent , Washington, Texas , Florida, Alabama, ULA, West Texas, Cape Canaveral , Florida, Glenn, Washington ,, Huntsville , Alabama, Cape Canaveral , Texas
SpaceX launched its mission to rescue the two Starliner astronauts — but it didn't go entirely according to plan. The company's Falcon 9 rocket has been grounded after a booster landed in the wrong place. It's the third time in three months that the Falcon 9 has been grounded. AdvertisementSpaceX's workhorse rocket has been grounded for the third time in three months after malfunctioning during a mission to rescue two astronauts stuck in space. The rocket was also briefly grounded by the FAA in August after failing an attempt to land back on Earth.
Persons: , Boeing's Starliner, Elon Musk, Musk, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams Organizations: SpaceX, Service, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Elon, Boeing, NASA, Crew
Meanwhile, Crew-9’s SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule has spent about one day traveling through orbit as it prepares to dock with the International Space Station. SpaceX/NASATogether, Hague, Williams, Wilmore and Gorbunov will complete SpaceX’s Crew-9 team. The group will spend about five months on board the space station before returning home no earlier than February. Williams and Wilmore first traveled to the International Space Station in early June aboard a Boeing Starliner spacecraft for what was expected to be a weeklong test mission. The three arrived at the space station aboard a Russian Soyuz vehicle on September 11.
Persons: Suni Williams, Butch Wilmore, Nick Hague, Aleksandr Gorbunov, Williams, Wilmore, Gorbunov, today’s, Stephanie Wilson, Cardman, Wilson, Zena Cardman, , Don Pettit, Aleksey Ovchinin, Ivan Vagner, Pettit Organizations: CNN, Station, Boeing, SpaceX, NASA, Hague, Cape Canaveral Space Force, International Space, International, Kennedy Space Center, International Space Station, Russian Soyuz Locations: Cape, Florida, Hague, Russian
CNN —A SpaceX mission due to take flight Saturday aims to unite the Boeing Starliner astronauts with the spacecraft that will bring them home. NASA’s Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore have already been on the International Space Station more than 100 days longer than expected. The two rode the Starliner to the International Space Station in early June for what was expected to be about a weeklong test flight. At liftoff, Hague and Gorbunov will be strapped inside the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft, nicknamed Freedom, as it sits atop a Falcon 9 rocket. Gorbunov and Hague will join them after docking with the space station, set for Sunday.
Persons: NASA’s Suni Williams, Butch Wilmore, Helene, , Steve Stich, Nick Hague, Aleksandr Gorbunov, Williams, Wilmore, Gorbunov, Stephanie Wilson, Zena, Cardman, , Nick, Alex, ” Cardman, Wilson, I’m, ” Williams Organizations: CNN, SpaceX, Boeing, Space, Cape Canaveral Space Force, NASA, Mission, International Space Station, International, Station, Engineers, Ad astra, Hague Locations: Florida, United States, Hague, Russian
SpaceX launched a half-empty Crew Dragon for two Boeing astronauts awaiting a trip home. AdvertisementSpaceX just launched a half-empty Crew Dragon spaceship into orbit for two astronauts who have been waiting for a trip home. Normally, Crew Dragon carries four astronauts to space at a time, but for the launch on Saturday, only two were aboard. Boeing's Starliner spacecraft docked to the International Space Station, as seen from a window on a SpaceX Crew Dragon. Astronauts left behindMeanwhile, two NASA astronauts who were supposed to be part of the Crew-9 mission had to stay behind.
Persons: , Dragon, It's, Nick Hague, Aleksandr Gorbunov, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams, Williams, Wilmore, Starliner, NASA Wilmore, NASA What's, Elon Musk, bTXWAfxfrh — Elon, uncrewed, Steve Stich, we'd, " Stich, Zena Cardman, Stephanie Wilson, Cardman, NASA's, Wilson, Hague Organizations: SpaceX, Boeing, NASA, Service, International, ISS, Starliner, Astronauts, Hague Locations: New Mexico, SpaceNews, Gorbunov
SpaceX is set to launch two new crew members to the International Space Station on Saturday, in a capsule that will eventually bring home two NASA astronauts who flew to orbit on Boeing’s problem-plagued Starliner spacecraft. On their return flight back to Earth, NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams will ride with them. After numerous delays, NASA opted to keep the two astronauts at the space station. Originally, the Crew-9 flight was supposed to carry four crew members to the space station, but in order to leave seats open for Wilmore and Williams, two NASA astronauts will have to wait for a future launch. Suni Williams, left, and Butch Wilmore at Space Launch Complex 41 in Cape Canaveral, Fla., on June 5.
Persons: Nick Hague, Aleksandr Gorbunov, Miguel J, Rodri­guez Carrillo, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams, Williams, Chris O'Meara, Hurricane Helene, Helene Organizations: SpaceX, International, NASA, Florida’s Cape Canaveral Space Force, Expedition, Kennedy Space Center, Getty, Hague, Boeing Locations: Florida’s, Cape Canaveral, Fla, Gorbunov, Hurricane, Florida’s Big Bend
FAA administrator Mike Whitaker said Boeing and SpaceX should be treated equally after Elon Musk attacked the regulator for fining his rocket company "for trivia" and said it should focus on Boeing's Starliner issues instead. In a post on X last week, Musk railed against the FAA's proposed $633,000 fine for SpaceX over two instances where the rocket company violated its launch licenses. Advertisement"NASA deemed the Boeing capsule unsafe for astronaut return, turning, out of necessity, to SpaceX, yet instead of fining Boeing for putting astronauts at risk, the FAA is fining SpaceX for trivia," the billionaire SpaceX founder wrote. SpaceX is also engaged in a war of words with the aviation regulator over delays to the next launch of Starship, the giant rocket Musk wants to use to travel to Mars. The FAA and SpaceX did not immediately respond to requests for comment sent outside normal working hours.
Persons: , Elon Musk's, Mike Whitaker, Elon Musk, Whitaker, Musk, Butch Wilmore, Sunita Williams, Starliner Organizations: Service, Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing, SpaceX, FAA, Business, Reuters, NASA Locations: Texas
Reptiles are astonishingly diverse, with extraordinary adaptations such as a tiny lizard in Costa Rica that has evolved a way to “scuba dive,” according to new research. Fantastic creaturesUsing the air bubble helps the anole to stay underwater longer, and the technique may help the tiny lizard hide from predators, researchers say. This ability allows the lizard to stay underwater for a prolonged period of time. Across the universeAn artist's concept depicts NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft entering interstellar space, or the space between stars. Along the way, Voyager 1 found a thin ring around Jupiter and two new Jovian moons as well as five new moons orbiting Saturn.
Persons: Lindsey Swierk, Kaspar Hauser, , Hauser, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams, Vincent van Gogh, ” Timothy A, Clary, Vincent van Gogh’s, It’s, King Ramses II, — Helga, Zohar, Artemis, Ashley Strickland, Katie Hunt Organizations: CNN, NASA, JPL, Caltech, NASA’s, International, Getty, Orion, Artemis, CNN Space, Science Locations: Costa Rica, Costa Rica’s, Nuremberg, Germany, Bristol, England, AFP, China, France, Egypt
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