| |   | | (CNSA) | Hey, Space Fans! Welcome to your daily dose of space from Space.com and today our top story is all about China's recent Shenzhou 20 astronauts, who revealed that the spacecraft damage that left them "stranded" on the Tiangong space station was more serious than we initially thought. Our Space Insider columnist Leonard David has the full story.
But don't stop there! We've also got a guide on what to expect for next week's Blood moon eclipse, Artemis 2 rollback updates and a fun take on what it would really take to live on Mars below. | | |   | | (Kim Snaith) | When it comes to Lego and space, it seems like spaceships and NASA shuttles and space stations get all the glory. But that's not so with this adorable 3-in-1 Lego Creator set that puts the solar system in sight with a spot-on telescope model. Here's our review. | | |  | | (WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images) | The March 2026 total lunar eclipse will bring a dramatic blood moon to skies across North America, Australia, New Zealand and eastern Asia — if you know where to look. But don't worry, we've done the work for you. | | |  | | (Gregg Newton/Getty Images) | You might have been expecting NASA's Artemis 2 moon rocket to roll back into its hangar today (honestly, so were we), but NASA has punted for a day. The rollback to the Vehicle Assembly Building for the Artemis 2 rocket is now set for no earlier than Wednesday, Feb. 25. Here's what we know. | | |  | | (Max Planck Institute) | If you're looking for something truly far out, here's something new from scientists on the hunt for binary black holes: Gravitational lenses of warped spacetime just might reveal twin black holes before gravitational waves ever do. It's a wild idea, and these scientists explain it all here. | |  | | (CSU/CIRA & NOAA) | In case you missed it, we had a blizzard hit Space.com's home offices here in New York City (which also affected the entire US Northeast) and satellites were key in tracking the storm. Here, we found some of the most striking views of the storm from space. | | |  | | (20th Century Studios) | It may have felt as cold as Mars during the US winter storm this week, but what if we REALLY lived on the Red Planet? Science fiction has had some great ideas of what that would look like (ahem, The Martian), but we put that and other film ideas to an astrophysicist to see what worked and what doesn't. | | |  | | (ESO/G. Tomassini et al.) | Today's space photo of the day cooks up a pretty view. The European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telesope captured this view of an egg-shaped binary star system inside an orange cocoon. The result is a stunning space image and that's no yoke! (Okay, that's enough for the puns, see how the photo was made here.) | |  | | (Daily Herald Archive/Getty Images) | For today's space history flashback, we're going back in time to 1968, when Jocelyn Bell - then an astronomy grad student - made a stunning discovery: the first known pulsar. See how she did it here. | | | | 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 | | | |