Elon Musk

A US flag flutters in the breeze. In the background, a rocket launchpad

What private companies could mean for NASA space exploration

It’s been nearly a decade since an astronaut was launched into space from American soil. Wednesday, at Cape Canaveral Florida, the company SpaceX and NASA tried to end that streak on board the Falcon 9 until weather scrapped the launch. The World’s Marco Werman speaks with Margaret Weitekamp, head of the space history department at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, about the future of US space flight. 

Two NASA astronauts in spacesuits in front of a rocket launch pad

NASA, SpaceX to launch rocket; EU, Japan plan huge stimulus efforts; Twitter marks Trump tweets with fact-check label

Top of The World
A black and white photo showing three scientists in an old looking laboratory.

Why history’s most famous scientists are usually a bit weird

Science
Tesla charging station

Despite low gasoline prices, automakers are moving ahead with affordable electric cars

Technology

Is Hyperloop the Future of Travel?

Development & Education
The World

SpaceX company Obama administrations’s latest hope for space travel

Global Politics

Today or tomorrow the Falcon 9 rocket is slated for test launch at Cape Canaveral. When the 18-story rocket fires into orbit – or crashes into the ocean – it will be carrying no cargo, no astronauts, just one heavy load: Obama’s hopes for space.