Watch the stars and from them learn. To the Master's honor all must turn, Each in its track, without a sound, Forever tracing Newton's ground

— Albert Einstein

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Earth will spin faster today to create 2nd-shortest day in history

Space.com - Mon, 07/21/2025 - 6:00am
Our planet has been rotating at its fastest since records began in 1973.
Categories: Astronomy

Catherine Staggs: Advancing Artemis Through Contracting Expertise

NASA - Breaking News - Mon, 07/21/2025 - 5:14am

A lifelong baseball fan, Catherine Staggs set out with her family to visit all 30 Major League Baseball stadiums across the United States. That love of the game eventually led them to settle in Houston about eight years ago – a choice that helped lead Staggs to NASA’s Johnson Space Center, where she is a contracting officer for the agency’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative. Through CLPS, she helps manage the contracts with commercial companies delivering science and technology to the Moon. These efforts support NASA’s Artemis campaign and lay the groundwork for continuous human presence on the lunar surface.

Official portrait of Catherine Staggs.NASA

She joined NASA as a civil servant in 2018, but Staggs’ career in the federal government stretches back to her college days. She completed an accounting co-op with the Department of Defense as a student at Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina, and secured a full-time accounting position with the agency following her graduation. She transitioned to a business financial manager position supporting U.S. Marine Corps projects while earning an MBA from The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina. “That position is where I started to dabble in contracting,” she said.

Staggs moved to Texas in 2014 to be closer to her boyfriend – now husband – who was stationed at Fort Hood in Killeen. She was hired as a contract compliance manager for a small, Killeen-based business that specialized in government contracts, officially launching her career in contracting. When Staggs’ husband retired from the Army, the couple decided to move to Houston because they loved to watch the Houston Astros play ball. Staggs continued working for the contracting company from her new home but missed meeting new people and collaborating with colleagues in person.

“I applied for a contract specialist job with NASA to get back into the office, and the rest is history,” she said.

Her current role at Johnson involves managing the administrative contract functions for the 13 base contracts that support CLPS, which are valued at $2.6 billion. She is also the contracting officer for Firefly’s Blue Ghost Mission-3 and helps to train and develop up-and-coming contract specialists. “I love to see the development each contract specialist has over their career,” she said. “My first Pathways intern is now working full-time for NASA as a contract specialist, and they are working to become a limited warrant contracting officer.”

The Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) procurement team celebrates the lunar landing of Intuitive Machines’ second CLPS flight at Ellington Field on March 6, 2025. Front row, from left: Doug York, Josh Smith, Tasha Beasley, Aubrie Henspeter, Jennifer Ariens, Catherine Staggs, and Shayla Martin. Back row: John Trahan.NASA

Her training experience provides valuable perspective on new team members. “Everyone starts at the bottom, not knowing what they don’t know,” she said. “We all have a beginning, and we need to remember that as we welcome new employees.”

Staggs said that navigating change has at times been difficult in her career, but she strives to remain flexible and open to adjusting work and life to meet the needs of the mission. “My time at NASA has helped develop my leadership skills through confidence in myself and my team,” she said.

Catherine Staggs received a 2023 Johnson Space Center Director’s Commendation Award. From left: Johnson Acting Center Director Steve Koerner, Jeremy Staggs, AJ Staggs, Catherine Staggs, NASA Acting Associate Administrator Vanessa Wyche. NASA

She looks forward to mentoring the Artemis Generation and sharing her contracting knowledge with new team members. She also anticipates crossing more baseball stadiums off her family’s list this summer.  

Explore More 6 min read NASA Program Builds Bridge From Military to Civilian Careers for Johnson Team Members Article 5 days ago 2 min read NASA Sees Key Progress on Starlab Commercial Space Station Article 6 days ago 3 min read Melissa Harris: Shaping NASA’s Vision for a Future in Low Earth Orbit Article 7 days ago
Categories: NASA

Catherine Staggs: Advancing Artemis Through Contracting Expertise

NASA News - Mon, 07/21/2025 - 5:14am

A lifelong baseball fan, Catherine Staggs set out with her family to visit all 30 Major League Baseball stadiums across the United States. That love of the game eventually led them to settle in Houston about eight years ago – a choice that helped lead Staggs to NASA’s Johnson Space Center, where she is a contracting officer for the agency’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative. Through CLPS, she helps manage the contracts with commercial companies delivering science and technology to the Moon. These efforts support NASA’s Artemis campaign and lay the groundwork for continuous human presence on the lunar surface.

Official portrait of Catherine Staggs.NASA

She joined NASA as a civil servant in 2018, but Staggs’ career in the federal government stretches back to her college days. She completed an accounting co-op with the Department of Defense as a student at Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina, and secured a full-time accounting position with the agency following her graduation. She transitioned to a business financial manager position supporting U.S. Marine Corps projects while earning an MBA from The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina. “That position is where I started to dabble in contracting,” she said.

Staggs moved to Texas in 2014 to be closer to her boyfriend – now husband – who was stationed at Fort Hood in Killeen. She was hired as a contract compliance manager for a small, Killeen-based business that specialized in government contracts, officially launching her career in contracting. When Staggs’ husband retired from the Army, the couple decided to move to Houston because they loved to watch the Houston Astros play ball. Staggs continued working for the contracting company from her new home but missed meeting new people and collaborating with colleagues in person.

“I applied for a contract specialist job with NASA to get back into the office, and the rest is history,” she said.

Her current role at Johnson involves managing the administrative contract functions for the 13 base contracts that support CLPS, which are valued at $2.6 billion. She is also the contracting officer for Firefly’s Blue Ghost Mission-3 and helps to train and develop up-and-coming contract specialists. “I love to see the development each contract specialist has over their career,” she said. “My first Pathways intern is now working full-time for NASA as a contract specialist, and they are working to become a limited warrant contracting officer.”

The Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) procurement team celebrates the lunar landing of Intuitive Machines’ second CLPS flight at Ellington Field on March 6, 2025. Front row, from left: Doug York, Josh Smith, Tasha Beasley, Aubrie Henspeter, Jennifer Ariens, Catherine Staggs, and Shayla Martin. Back row: John Trahan.NASA

Her training experience provides valuable perspective on new team members. “Everyone starts at the bottom, not knowing what they don’t know,” she said. “We all have a beginning, and we need to remember that as we welcome new employees.”

Staggs said that navigating change has at times been difficult in her career, but she strives to remain flexible and open to adjusting work and life to meet the needs of the mission. “My time at NASA has helped develop my leadership skills through confidence in myself and my team,” she said.

Catherine Staggs received a 2023 Johnson Space Center Director’s Commendation Award. From left: Johnson Acting Center Director Steve Koerner, Jeremy Staggs, AJ Staggs, Catherine Staggs, NASA Acting Associate Administrator Vanessa Wyche. NASA

She looks forward to mentoring the Artemis Generation and sharing her contracting knowledge with new team members. She also anticipates crossing more baseball stadiums off her family’s list this summer.  

Explore More 6 min read NASA Program Builds Bridge From Military to Civilian Careers for Johnson Team Members Article 5 days ago 2 min read NASA Sees Key Progress on Starlab Commercial Space Station Article 6 days ago 3 min read Melissa Harris: Shaping NASA’s Vision for a Future in Low Earth Orbit Article 1 week ago
Categories: NASA

ExoMars parachutes ready for martian deployment

ESO Top News - Mon, 07/21/2025 - 3:30am

 

The most complex parachute system to ever deploy on Mars has successfully slowed down an ExoMars mock-up landing platform for a safe touchdown on Earth.

Categories: Astronomy

<p><a href="https://apod.nasa.gov/apod

APOD - Sun, 07/20/2025 - 12:00pm

What is going on with this galaxy?


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

South Korea wants to build a moon base by 2045

Space.com - Sun, 07/20/2025 - 12:00pm
South Korea just laid out its long-term space exploration road map, which features the planned construction of a moon base two decades from now.
Categories: Astronomy

This wild bioplastic made of algae just aced a Mars pressure test. Can astronauts use it to build on the Red Planet?

Space.com - Sun, 07/20/2025 - 11:00am
Scientists have grown algae in bioplastic habitats under Mars-like conditions, a step that could bring long-term space colonization closer to reality.
Categories: Astronomy

Discover where the Eagle might have landed: How to find Apollo 11's backup sites on the moon

Space.com - Sun, 07/20/2025 - 9:00am
Find the locations of the five landing zones considered as the setting for humanity's first steps on another world.
Categories: Astronomy

This Planet's Death Spiral Could Teach Us A Lesson About Rocky Exoplanets

Universe Today - Sun, 07/20/2025 - 8:35am

Macquarie University astronomers have tracked an extreme planet's orbital decay, confirming it is spiraling toward its star in a cosmic death dance that could end in three possible ways. It could cross the Roche line and be torn apart, it could plunge to destruction in its star, or it could be stripped all the way down to a rocky core.

Categories: Astronomy

To Find Another Earth, We Need to Understand Atmospheric Escape

Universe Today - Sun, 07/20/2025 - 8:35am

Atmospheric escape shapes an exoplanet's future. Earth's exosphere is extended and detectable due to ocean-related atmospheric escape. If we can detect the same features on an exoplanet, it could suggest oceans and habitability. But we need to build the Habitable Worlds Observatory first.

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers Use the Colours of Trans-Neptunian Objects' to Track an Ancient Stellar Flyby

Universe Today - Sun, 07/20/2025 - 8:35am

Trans-Neptunian Objects reside in the distant Solar System as remnants of the System's early days. They follow unusual orbits and range in colour from reds to greys. New research uses their colours and orbits to show how a stellar flyby can account for their modern-day orbits.

Categories: Astronomy

NASA's Roman Space Telescope could discover 100,000 new cosmic explosions: 'We're definitely expecting the unexpected'

Space.com - Sun, 07/20/2025 - 6:00am
Supernovas, kilonovas, gamma-ray bursts... oh my! The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will uncover 100,000 of these explosions and many more powerful and violent cosmic events.
Categories: Astronomy

Newly-Discovered Interstellar Comet is Billions of Years Older Than the Solar System

Universe Today - Sat, 07/19/2025 - 8:25pm

All eyes are on the newly discovered interstellar object 3I/ATLAS, currently inbound to the inner solar system. Initial observations have revealed that it's rich in water ice, and it's believed that it originated from the Milky Way's thick disk, ancient stars that orbit above and below the galactic plane. This could mean that 3I/ATLAS is billions of years older than the Solar System, the oldest comet ever discovered. It should reveal more as it heats up and outgasses as it gets closer to the Sun.

Categories: Astronomy

See the moon cross the Pleiades for the last time this year on July 20

Space.com - Sat, 07/19/2025 - 11:00am
The moon's crescent limb will cloak and uncover stars from the iconic cluster before sunrise.
Categories: Astronomy

This Week In Space podcast: Episode 169 — The Day Mars Died

Space.com - Sat, 07/19/2025 - 10:20am
On Episode 169 of This Week In Space, Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik are joined by JPL Chief Engineer Emeritus Rob Manning to look back at the Mariner 4 Mars mission 60 years later.
Categories: Astronomy

Synthetic Biology Could Support Future Outposts on the Moon and Mars

Universe Today - Sat, 07/19/2025 - 9:05am

When we leave Earth, we have to bring everything with us, from the air we breathe to the food we eat. For example, a 6-person, 1000-day mission might require 108 tonnes of food. In a new paper, researchers suggest ways that synthetic biology could allow us to convert local resources, regenerate resources in closed-loop environments, protect explorers from radiation, and create custom medicine on demand to support long-term space exploration.

Categories: Astronomy

10 unique tours and experiences for the 2027 'eclipse of the century'

Space.com - Sat, 07/19/2025 - 9:00am
From "Star Wars" film sets to baboons in Saudi Arabia, here's how to experience the "eclipse of the century" in style on Aug. 2, 2027.
Categories: Astronomy

<p><a href="https://apod.nasa.gov/apod

APOD - Sat, 07/19/2025 - 8:00am

Why isn't this ant a big sphere?


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

Twin NASA Mars probes will fly on 2nd-ever launch of Blue Origin's huge New Glenn rocket

Space.com - Sat, 07/19/2025 - 8:00am
Blue Origin's powerful New Glenn rocket now has a payload for its second-ever flight —NASA's ESCAPADE Mars mission.
Categories: Astronomy

2 new NASA satellites will track space weather to help keep us safe from solar storms

Space.com - Sat, 07/19/2025 - 6:00am
The new TRACERS mission will track magnetic reconnection that drives particles down into Earth's atmosphere when space weather turns bad.
Categories: Astronomy