Martin

Martin of Tours (Latin: Sanctus Martinus Turonensis; 316/336 – 8 November 397), also known as Martin the Merciful, was the third bishop of Tours.

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NASA Selects Lockheed Martin to Develop Lightning Mapper for NOAA

NASA Selects Lockheed Martin to Build NOAA's Next-Gen Spacecraft

NASA Selects Lockheed Martin to Build Next-Gen Spacecraft for NOAA

Read an extract from In Ascension by Martin MacInnes

"How To Explore Mars" Panel discussion between Dr. Robert Zubrin and Lord Martin Rees. Venue: British Interplanetary Society Hq. London and Online Thursday 18 January 2024, 1900 GMT

Firefly to launch a Lockheed Martin satellite antenna demonstration

New Lockheed Martin system will manage satellite constellations from the cloud using AI

NASA and DARPA Award Contract for a Nuclear Engine to Lockheed Martin

Lockheed Martin to Fly Demo Mission on Firefly Alpha Rocket

Firefly to launch Lockheed Martin small-satellite experiment

Lockheed Martin declares success demonstrating tech for in-orbit satellite servicing

Lockheed Martin Announces Commercial Space Subsidiary: Crescent Space Services

Space hotels are a classic Sci-Fi trope. But American hospitality giant Hilton recently signed a deal with Lockheed Martin and Voyager Space to build the solar system’s first space hotel onboard Starlab — a space station with NASA funding — which is currently under development.

Scientists Raise Alarm About Threats to the Human Microbiome in New Documentary 'The Invisible Extinction'. Dr. Martin Blaser and Dr. Gloria Dominguez-Bello talked to PEOPLE about their quest to save the human microbiome — before it's too late (Jan 2023)

Inflatable Spacecraft Will Take Us To Mars, Says Lockheed Martin V.P.

Under pressure! Watch a Lockheed Martin inflatable space habitat explode (video)

Can quantum computers really create wormholes? | Martin Bauer

NASA Orders Three More Orion Spacecraft From Lockheed Martin

Lockheed Martin Laser Breakthroughs Could Signal A Turning Point For Missile Defense

Extraterrestrial intelligence is more likely to be artificial than biological, argues Martin Rees, UK's Astronomer Royal