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Scientific American

Former deputy surgeon general Erica Schwartz nominated as new CDC chief NASA Artemis II astronauts say thank you to the world Congress grills RFK, Jr., about vaccines and cuts to health budget How the Grand Canyon formed is a surprisingly messy story. Here's the latest clue How far from humanity were the astronauts of Artemis II? The answer will surprise you Effect of antiamyloid Alzheimer’s drugs ‘absent or trivial,’ Cochrane review finds The Trump administration is looking to experts to weigh in on peptides When a naked mole rat queen dies, that usually means war—but not for this colony NASA needs nuclear power for its moon base. Here’s the White House plan to get it Why do older people have fewer seasonal allergies? 250-million-year-old fossil proves mammal ancestors laid eggs A face-swapping illusion can unlock childhood memories 30 years of Pokémon—how the Japanese franchise mirrors real-world science Sperm whales may make their own vowel sounds, similar to human language Colombia will euthanize Pablo Escobar’s invasive ‘cocaine hippos’ NASA’s Artemis III will pit SpaceX against Blue Origin The East Coast could see blazing hot temperatures this week. Here’s why Scientists just discovered 5.6 million bees under a New York State cemetery The real science of Pokémon How chemists engineer the signature smells of luxury perfumes How two mathematicians solved a cryptography mystery The engineering marvels hidden inside six-figure watches Expensive versus affordable binoculars—what’s the difference? How physicists found a new type of magnet hiding in plain sight A hot pair of supplements, creatine and methylene blue dye, may not work together Unlikely paths to discovery The baffling ecological disaster that's killing America’s freshwater mussels Poem: ‘How I Became a Spitfire Pilot during My Cataract Operation’ DARPA built an AI to fact-check enemy weapons claims Mathematicians created an ‘impossible’ shape that shouldn’t exist How cosmic rays are helping mining companies find critical minerals underground New evidence links heart disease to inflammation—and drugs can stop it An asteroid extinguished all the dinosaurs except for birds. Here’s why Math Puzzle: A disassembly job May 2026: Science History from 50, 100 and 150 Years Ago Readers respond to the January 2026 issue How to build a space hotel The humble ham sandwich inspired a math theorem for sharing food fairly Imperiled ‘cloud jaguar’ spotted in Honduran mountains for the first time in a decade Person functionally cured of HIV after bone marrow transplant from sibling Dream Chaser space plane faces uncertain future in NASA’s push for the moon Bizarre ‘compleximers’ break the rules of both glass and plastic This method to reverse cellular aging is about to be tested in humans The Artemis II mission worked—but should we really keep returning to the moon? 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Scientists question CIA’s claim of long-range heartbeat detection How well GLP-1 weight loss drugs work may depend on your genetics NASA’s Artemis moon missions are a game changer for astronomy Tracking Artemis II—after its historic lunar flyby, NASA’s moon mission heads home NASA’s Artemis program has sparked a race to land U.S. rovers on the moon Do people see robots as having race? New studies clash as humanoids enter the real world Health experts warn of rising measles cases in undervaccinated communities In a first, Artemis II moon mission astronauts make ‘ship to ship’ call to ISS The mathematically correct way to slice a pizza See NASA’s Artemis II mission’s first incredible photos of the moon, Earth and a total solar eclipse In an echo of Apollo 8, NASA’s Artemis II astronauts witness stunning ‘Earthrise’ and ‘Earthset’ NASA’s Artemis II astronauts celebrate epic lunar flyby with stunning new images NASA’s Artemis era may finally solve three major moon mysteries NASA’s Artemis II ‘free return’ trajectory lets gravity do the driving Trump speaks with NASA's Artemis II astronauts after historic moon flyby NASA’s Artemis II crew experience total solar eclipse from space NASA’s Artemis II moon mission reaches greatest distance from Earth NASA’s Artemis II astronauts break Apollo’s distance record Watch live—NASA’s Artemis II’s moon flyby is underway Bypass the Strait of Hormuz with nuclear explosives? The U.S. studied that option in the 1960s NASA’s Artemis II mission is about to pass behind the moon NASA’s Artemis II, endangered species and oil, low western U.S. snowpack Where is Artemis II? NASA astronauts near the moon for first time in more than 50 years NASA’s Artemis II laser communications system is beaming 4K video from the moon NASA’s Artemis II moon mission is gearing up for its lunar flyby What will NASA’s Artemis II astronauts see on the moon?
SpaceX punts Starship V3 launch to May 21 as investigation opens into Starbase worker’s death
Claire Cameron · 2026-05-20 · via Scientific American

SpaceX is now targeting the evening of May 21 to launch the latest and largest version of its Starship megarocket for the first time

SpaceX's Starship launches during a test flight in 2025.

An October 2025 test flight of SpaceX’s Starship.

Gabriel V. Cardenas/AFP via Getty Images

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Elon Musk’s SpaceX is gearing up for what could be the most critical test of its Starship megarocket to date as the company comes under the scrutiny of federal officials who are worried that delays to the Starship program will eat into NASA’s planned moon mission timeline and affect worker safety at SpaceX’s Starbase complex in Texas.

The test flight was originally planned for last Friday—the same day that emergency services responded to the death of a SpaceX worker at Starbase. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has opened an investigation into the incident; the Wall Street Journal reported the person was a contractor at Starbase who died in a fall, while social media posts indicated emergency vehicles outside the Gigabay building—a facility SpaceX uses to produce and maintain Starship. It is not clear whether the delay in the upcoming Starship launch’s timing is at all related to this incident; SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

SpaceX had initially punted the launch date to May 19 before the company announced a further delay over the weekend. Now it is targeting May 21, with a launch window opening no earlier than 6:30 P.M. EDT. SpaceX will livestream the launch on its website and YouTube.


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Starship is currently one of two proposed vehicles that NASA wants to use to ferry its astronauts from lunar orbit to the moon’s surface as soon as 2028. The space agency is also angling to test Starship’s ability to rendezvous and dock with its own crew capsule, Orion, in Earth orbit in 2027. But a federal watchdog report published in 2025 warned that Starship is seriously behind schedule—SpaceX has yet to show that it can safely and successfully get astronauts back to the moon.

This test flight, SpaceX’s 12th overall, marks the first for Starship V3—the latest and largest version of the vehicle, standing some 407 feet (124 meters) tall when fully stacked. It’s designed to loft more than 100 metric tons of cargo to orbit and to be fully reusable, but SpaceX hasn’t demonstrated that the vehicle is ready for orbit. This test will also be suborbital and is aimed at showing the new hardware works as expected; most previous Starship tests have ended in an explosion or with the disintegration of the rocket, although the most recent two tests were successful.

The outcome of Thursday’s scheduled demonstration could also set the tone for SpaceX’s highly anticipated initial public offering (IPO), which, with a likely valuation of $1.75 trillion, would make it the biggest IPO ever. SpaceX has touted Starship as a workhorse vehicle that can help boost its commercial rocket launch business and grow its own Internet satellite megaconstellation, Starlink, as well as its planned space-based data center network.

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