| |   | | (NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Steve Gribben) | Happy Tuesday, Space Fans! Our top story today comes from NASA's DART asteroid mission (apparently from beyond the grave) because its 2022 impact changed its target asteroid more than we thought. Here's how it happened.
But wait, there's more! A NASA spacecraft falls out of space today, we know where China's 1st moon astronauts will land, and NASA has an Artemis 2 update coming this week! Read on to learn more. | | | Space Quiz! What NASA spacecraft is falling out of space soon? | | |   | | (Future/NordVPN) | With tons of exciting sci-fi series coming in the next few months, including Series 5 "For All Mankind" on March 27, and its 'Star City' spinoff coming in May, you may be wondering how to watch them on the go. These VPN deals will assure your access while traveling, save you 74% and even land you a free $50 Amazon voucher as a bonus. | | | | Artemis 2: NASA's next moonshot | | | NASA to give update on Artemis 2 this week |  | | (Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo/Getty Images) | Another week, another Artemis 2 update. This is just a heads up to let you know that NASA is holding a Flight Readiness Review for a potential April 1 launch for Artemis 2 astronaut moon mission. A press conference is set for Thursday, March 12, at 3 p.m. ET (1900 GMT), according to NASA. | | |  | | (NASA) | Some cosmic games are afoot with the biggest planet in our solar system, so if it looks weird tonight, here's why: The gas giant Jupiter will appear to reverse direction in the night sky from March 10 onward, bringing an end to its temporary retrograde motion that began in November 2025. | | |  | | (JHU/APL, NASA) | One thing you WON'T find in the night sky after tonight is a NASA spacecraft that's spent 14 years studying Earths' Van Allen radiation belts. Which one is it and where will it land? Well, here's what we know. | | |  | | (CMSA/CCTV) | China is getting serious about landing astronauts on the moon by 2030. So much so, that the country's space agency has unveiled strange volcanic landscape on the moon's near side as its target. Here's where they'll land. | | |  | | (CompPair) | Getting to the moon may become a bit easier if the spacecraft we use don't have to worry about irreparable damage. In this story, we found a team of engineers who have a way for spacecraft to fix themselves. Here's how it could work. | | |  | | (DC Studios)) | The Green Lantern may be DC's greatest space cop, but if you want to watch the first trailer for the new TV series on HBO, put the kiddies to bed. Here it is, F-bombs and all, and we're confused. | | |  | | (ESA/Hubble & NASA) | Our pick for today's space photo is the Cat's Eye Nebula as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope and Europe's Euclid observatory. That it's beautiful is undeniable, but there's more to this image than meets the (cat's) eye. Find out what here. | |  | | (UniversalImagesGroup/Getty Images) | Today's daily dose of swpace history comes from the outer solar system. On March 10, 1977, astronomers discovered rings around Uranus! Astronomers had long suspected that Uranus has rings, but the actual discovery happened by accident. See how it happened in this video. | | | | And that'll be a wrap for today's daily Space.com newsletter. Farewell Van Allen Probe A, we hardly knew ye, and we'll see you all tomorrow!
Keep looking up!
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 | | | |