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Endurance will undergo testing in a thermal vacuum chamber at NASA’s Johnson Space Center that was originally used for the Apollo program and later used for the James Webb Space Telescope.
NASA's Mission Control Center at the Johnson Space Center in Houston will track the Space Launch System rocket, the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage, and the Orion spacecraft during Artemis II.
The Crew-12 astronauts entered pre-launch quarantine on January 28 at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.
Astronauts can observe quarantine from their house in Houston instead of at the Johnson Space Center quarantine facility.
Thermal Vacuum Chamber A at NASA Johnson Space Center is described as one of the most advanced facilities for environmental qualification of spacecraft.
Blue Origin posted on X on 21 January 2026 that Blue Moon MK1 had departed Florida for testing in Thermal Vacuum Chamber A at NASA Johnson Space Center.
Blue Moon MK1 departed Florida bound for the NASA Johnson Space Center in Texas to undergo thermal vacuum testing.
Blue Moon MK1 will be tested in Thermal Vacuum Chamber A at NASA Johnson Space Center.
Thermal Vacuum Chamber A at NASA Johnson Space Center was previously used to test vehicles from the Apollo program.
The transfer of Blue Moon MK1 to NASA Johnson Space Center represents the program’s entry into advanced environmental verification after completing a preliminary phase.
Vanessa Wyche, Director of the Johnson Space Center, Jasmin Moghbeli, and Cheryl McNair will participate in the NASA Johnson Day of Remembrance commemoration.
Following the acoustic campaign, the Blue Moon MK1 will proceed to thermal vacuum chamber testing at NASA’s Johnson Space Center.
Experts at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston and Kennedy Space Center in Florida support the Mars to Table Challenge.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman is at the Johnson Space Center.
NASA is coordinating activities at Johnson Space Center in preparation for the Artemis II launch.
Starting in November 2024, Suwa began pre-assignment training at NASA's Johnson Space Center, including extravehicular activities and robotic arm operations.
Makoto Suwa received official astronaut certification in October 2024 and has been training at NASA's Johnson Space Center.
The NASA–Momentus mission is funded and managed by NASA’s Small Spacecraft Technology program and the Engineering Directorate at Johnson Space Center.
Suwa will transition to assignment training based in NASA's Johnson Space Center moving forward.
Project Athena proposes consolidating mission control operations at Johnson Space Center in Houston.