NASA’s Roman Mission will unveil our home galaxy using cosmic dust. The Sun’s activity is ramping up. NASA’s Lucy Mission explored regions on an asteroid and named them officially. Avatars for astronaut health will fly on NASA’s Artemis II mission. NASA’s GUARDIAN tsunami detection tech catches waves in real time. NASA data and trainings help Uruguay navigate drought. Key documents in the history of space policy date back to the 1950s, including the National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 and President John F. Kennedy’s speeches on space exploration.

The Space Policy Archive contains documents related to space policy from various administrations, including Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, and others. Some of the documents include Space Force Doctrine Document 1 by Donald Trump, Executive Order 14186 “The Iron Dome for America” by Donald Trump, and DoD Directive 3100.01 Space Policy (change 1) by Joe Biden. These documents cover subjects such as strategy, security, missile defense, governance, and anti-satellite systems.
Dennis M. Bushnell authored “Future Strategic Issues/Future Warfare [Circa 2025]” for NASA in July 2001. The document discusses various topics such as transhumanism, superhumanism, posthumanism, Virtual Reality, biotechnology, nanotechnology, robotics, Artificial Intelligence, terraforming, drones, and military strategies. Bushnell presented this at the 4th Annual Testing and Training for Readiness Symposium and Exhibition in Orlando, Florida on August 14, 2001.
The US Space Force has developed an official “Space Warfighting” framework to train units for warfare in space. This framework establishes a common language for counterspace operations and outlines offensive and defensive actions for maintaining control in space. The focus is on space superiority, involving seeking out and destroying enemy spacecraft. The framework also addresses combat in three mission areas: orbital warfare, electromagnetic warfare, and cyberspace warfare. The document emphasizes the need for detailed analysis due to the highly automated nature of space systems.
The article discusses the records of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and its predecessor, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA). It provides details on various record groups, field installations, space vehicle accidents, motion pictures, video recordings, sound recordings, machine-readable records, and still pictures related to NASA. The administrative history, functions, and related records of NASA and NACA are also outlined in the article.