NASA Authorization Act of 2026: Congress Advances Lunar Base, Artemis II, and Record Science Funding Podcast Por  arte de portada

NASA Authorization Act of 2026: Congress Advances Lunar Base, Artemis II, and Record Science Funding

NASA Authorization Act of 2026: Congress Advances Lunar Base, Artemis II, and Record Science Funding

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The United States Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee unanimously advanced the NASA Authorization Act of 2026 last week, advancing Congress's effort to set long-term priorities for the agency. According to the American Institute of Physics, the bill authorizes a permanent base on the Moon, reinstates NASA's chief scientist, chief economist, and chief technologist roles, supports science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education, and extends International Space Station operations to 2032 for a smoother transition to commercial stations. It directs continued development of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, prevents discontinuation of the Chandra X-ray Telescope, aligns with revised Artemis plans by canceling Space Launch System upgrades, and requires new plans for Mars Sample Return after its prior funding lapse.

NASA's Artemis II mission, the first crewed Artemis flight, now targets a March 2026 launch from Kennedy Space Center in Florida after a successful wet dress rehearsal on February 2. Discover Magazine reports engineers completed propellant loading and countdown practice, identifying issues from prior hydrogen leaks by replacing seals, paving the way for astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen to fly the Orion spacecraft around the Moon's far side on a 10-day free-return trajectory testing deep space systems without landing.

Congress recently passed H.R. 6938, restoring near-full funding for NASA science across planetary science, astrophysics, Earth science, and heliophysics, rejecting deep proposed cuts. The Planetary Society details how bipartisan support protected missions like Venus explorers DaVinci and VERITAS, upcoming Dragonfly to Titan, NEO Surveyor for near-Earth objects, and early work on the Habitable Worlds Observatory. Senator Ted Cruz added a ten billion dollar amendment over six years for NASA contracts through fiscal year 2029.

These developments highlight a pattern of robust bipartisan commitment to United States planetary leadership, countering budget threats and rival programs like China's, while accelerating lunar returns, Mars sample goals, and outer solar system probes amid global efforts such as Japan's Martian Moons exploration.

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