 | | Created for znamenski.spacecom@blogger.com | Web Version | | | |   | | (NASA/Robert Markowitz) | Hey, hey, Space Fans! Welcome to your daily dose of space and our top story today is this: At long last, we finally know which astronaut suffered the medical issue that forced an entire crew to be evacuated from the International Space Station. Who was it? Well, we're glad you asked...
But that's not all. NASA's Artemis 2 moon rocket rolled back for repairs, scientists just finished a huge survey and a SpaceX Dragon is returning to Earth. Check it out! | | | Space Quiz: Dragonfly is NASA's 2nd rotorcraft for offworld flight. What was the 1st? | | |   | | (Future) | Our space deal for today is from a galaxy far, far away. You can save almost 40% on the Lego Star Wars Tantive IV set, a buildable replica of the iconic ship from where the franchise started in 'A New Hope'. Here's how. | | | | Artemis 2: NASA's next moonshot | |  | | (NASA/Cory Huston) | Yesterday, we brought you live views of NASA's Artemis 2 moon rocket's move off the launch pad. Today, it's fully in the barn and ready for repairs to its upper stage. But will it be ready to fly in April? Here's what we know. | | |  | | (Igor Alecsander via Getty Images) | Speaking of the moon, the Blood Moon lunar eclipse of 2026 is coming on March 6. Our experts have these tips for you to get the perfect eclipse shot. | | |  | | (Maya Horton / LOFAR Surveys Collaboration/Robert Lea) | Our next story looks a bit farther than the moon. Astronomers have used the world's largest and most sensitive low-frequency radio telescope array LOFAR to create the largest radio survey of the cosmos, revealing 13.7 million cosmic objects and events. That's just wild. | | |  | | (NASA) | A SpaceX's Dragon capsule will return to Earth, but there are no astronauts on this one. Here's how tons of supplies are returning to Earth tonight. | | |  | | (NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Steve Gribben) | When it comes to wild tech in space, NASA's Ingenuity drone was awesome. But the agency's Dragonfly rotorcraft mission will put a drone the size of a car on Saturn's moon Titan. And it's nuclear powered. It's lead scientist explains it all on This Week In Space with Space.com's Tariq Malik and Rod Pyle of the National Space Society via the TWiT network. | | |  | | (Paramount) | To say that Star Trek: Voyager's Emergency Medical Hologram evolved beyond his programming would be an understatement. Starfleet Academy's latest episode shows us exactly why. | | |  | | (ESA/IPEV/PNRA-A. Traverso) | A blazing 'ring of fire' appeared in the frozen skies above Antarctica during the annular solar eclipse on Feb. 17, 2026. This spectacle was witnessed by only a handful of people on Earth. Here's the story of this photo. | |  | | (NASA) | On Feb. 26, 1966, NASA launched its new Saturn IB rocket on its first test flight for the Apollo program. Here's how it went. And that will be it for today's daily space newsletter. All the best for your Thursday, Space Fans, and keep looking up! Best, Tariq Malik Editor-in-Chief, Space.com | | | | Stay up-to-date on all things space science, news, and entertainment by subscribing to our newsletters. | |  | | | | | | | Future US LLC © | | Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY, 10036 | | | | |