Welcome to your weekly space update, listeners. NASA's biggest headline this week: the Artemis II rocket is powering through its critical wet dress rehearsal right now at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. According to NASA updates, engineers powered up the massive 322-foot Space Launch System core stage and second stage after a countdown kicked off Saturday night, targeting a simulated launch at 9 p.m. EST tonight, February 2. Weather delays pushed tanking back from earlier dates, but if it succeeds, four astronauts could orbit the Moon as soon as February 8.
This test is make-or-break for the 10-day mission, flying a free-return path around the Moon—the first crewed lunar trip since Apollo. NASA reports the crew is in quarantine in Houston, ready to go. Meanwhile, Congress just delivered a budget win: a bipartisan minibus bill allocates $24.4 billion for NASA in fiscal 2026, far above the Trump administration's $18.8 billion request. It pumps $7.3 billion into science missions, rejecting deep cuts to Earth observatories, Mars Sample Return, and more, as detailed by Payload Space and the House Appropriations Committee.
These moves boost American innovation, securing jobs at centers like Marshall in Alabama, where billionaire astronaut Jared Isaacman announced demolishing old structures for new tech. Businesses like SpaceX face launch delays—Crew-12 to the ISS slips to at least February 19 if Artemis lifts off. States like Florida gain economically from launches, while international partners stay locked in for Artemis.
NASA Administrator notes, "This funding restores our science leadership." Key data: science gets nearly double the proposed amount, with $341 million for planetary defense.
Impacts hit home—citizens get inspiring STEM opportunities, like restored $63 million for Space Grant programs. Watch the 24/7 livestream for go/no-go at L-10 hours tonight.
Next, eyes on February 8 launch window. Catch skywatching tips from NASA on Jupiter's glow. Dive deeper at nasa.gov/artemis-ii. Tune in, subscribe, and share your lunar excitement.
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