The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

What does NASA do?

NASA works to understand and explore space for all humankind. It guides how the United States builds a future beyond Earth, invents new ways to access space, performs scientific and technological research, and launches both crewed and robotic missions to explore the Cosmos. 

As a civilian agency of the U.S. government, NASA is not responsible for anything military or involving national security. Instead, NASA’s main priorities are related to human spaceflight, robotic space exploration, aeronautics, space science, and engineering. 

Buzz Aldrin on the Moon
Buzz Aldrin on the Moon Astronaut Buzz Aldrin walks on the surface of the moon near the leg of the lunar module Eagle during the Apollo 11 mission. Neil Armstrong is reflected in his helmet.Image: NASA

NASA is a leader in humanity’s search for life elsewhere in the Universe. It launches probes to explore other worlds throughout the Solar System, and it operates space telescopes to answer basic questions about the Universe. The agency develops new launch vehicles and spacecraft, sends astronauts to conduct research aboard the International Space Station (ISS), and helps defend Earth from potentially dangerous asteroids and solar storms.

NASA plans to put humans back on the Moon in the late 2020s. This mission, called Artemis III, will inaugurate a new era of sustained, international lunar exploration through the agency’s leadership. Farther from Earth, NASA is operating multiple rovers advancing what we know about Mars and its possibility of hosting life. A future mission will go even further by bringing back material from Mars to Earth. In a huge step forward for the search for life beyond Earth, NASA is also sending probes to explore the mysteries of Venus and Saturn’s potentially habitable moon Titan. A mission to Jupiter’s moon Europa, which may also host life, is already on its way.

Closer to home, NASA plays a key role in developing a spaceflight economy where commercial providers can help increase access to space. NASA also collects data on our planet from space, informing our understanding of Earth and how it is being affected by climate change. 

Spacewalk over the Bahamas
Spacewalk over the Bahamas NASA astronauts James H. Newman and Carl E. Walz performing a spacewalk during a Space Shuttle mission. Part of the Caribbean Sea and the Bahama Islands is visible behind them.Image: NASA

What has NASA accomplished?

NASA has:

  • Landed 12 people on the Moon over the course of six Apollo missions, fundamentally changing humanity’s relationship with the Cosmos
  • Sent over 80 probes into space that have collectively visited every planet in the Solar System as well as dozens of moons, asteroids, and comets
  • Built the Skylab space station and led the development of the International Space Station
  • Invented the Space Shuttle, the world’s first reusable spacecraft, and flown it over 100 times
Hubble Ready for Release
Hubble Ready for Release Astronauts aboard Space Shuttle Discovery prepare to release NASA's Hubble Space Telescope after completing repairs and upgrades during the observatory's second servicing mission in 1997.Image: NASA
STS-129 Launch
STS-129 Launch Liftoff of Space Shuttle Atlantis at 2:28 PM EDT and six man crew on 16 November 2009 from Launch Pad 39 A at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida.Image: Ken Kremer

How does NASA work?

NASA pushes the frontier of space science and exploration through its own capabilities and through outside partnerships. The agency employs seventeen thousand people in over a dozen facilities across the country. At the same time, it contracts with businesses and private institutions to develop cutting-edge technologies. 

How big is NASA? NASA is the largest and most capable space agency in the world. Though some public space organizations have more employees, NASA holds the record for most human spaceflight and space science missions launched. The agency’s budget is about three times that of the second-largest purely civilian space organization, the European Space Agency (ESA).

Internally, NASA makes discoveries and inventions that have laid the foundation for much of humanity’s current presence in space, including the satellite networks crucial to modern society and the rocketry needed to launch them. NASA often does the sort of fundamental science that pays off too slowly to attract private investment, but which is transformational once developed

Externally, NASA advances space technology by investing in private companies that offer complementary approaches to space. Most of NASA’s budget is spent on contracts with private institutions and companies to supply everything from custom materials and components to entire launch vehicles and spacecraft. SpaceX’s extremely successful Falcon 9 rocket, for example, had about half of its development costs paid for by NASA. At one point, SpaceX would probably have gone bankrupt if it weren’t for a NASA contract to fly cargo to the ISS. 

Endeavour approaches the ISS
Endeavour approaches the ISS Space Shuttle Endeavour approaches the International Space Station in 2007 during mission STS-118.Image: NASA

Okay, but who makes the decisions?

What NASA does, and how NASA does it, gets decided through several democratic channels. The agency is a part of the executive branch of the U.S. government, and the President appoints the leader of NASA, called its administrator, who is subject to Senate approval. The agency’s scientific priorities are guided by the Decadal Surveys drafted by scientists on behalf of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. The White House proposes annual funding amounts and sets space exploration objectives. 

Ultimately, Congress is responsible for  NASA’s activities and budget. That means grassroots advocacy efforts, like those The Planetary Society leads, can shape NASA’s future.  By showing elected representatives that space science and exploration are important to their constituents, by encouraging Members of Congress to join the Planetary Science Caucus, and by participating in our annual Day of Action, members of The Planetary Society have helped keep NASA missions on the launchpad. 

Planetary Society President Jim Bell Before Congress
Planetary Society President Jim Bell Before Congress Jim Bell, center, listening to questions from the Space Subcommittee of the House of Representatives.Image: Tushar Dayal

NASA can:

  • Build and operate its own satellites
  • Build its own launch vehicles
  • Build human-rated spacecraft
  • Provide commercial launch services
  • Launch humans into space
  • Perform space science missions

How did NASA get started?

NASA was officially created when President Dwight Eisenhower signed the Space Act into law on July 29, 1958. The agency began operations on October 1st, 1958.

Almost exactly one year earlier, the Soviet Union had launched Sputnik, the world’s first artificial satellite. Leaders in the United States government were concerned that this meant the U.S. was falling behind in scientific and technological development, especially in ways that could prove important to the outcome of the Cold War. 

NASA was established to unify and spearhead U.S. efforts in space and aeronautics. But unlike other space organizations, NASA was dedicated solely to peaceful civilian space activities. In part, this was a way to develop space technology without raising Cold War tensions. The result is an agency dedicated to expanding humanity’s knowledge of space, collaborating with other nations, and improving humankind’s ability to access space for the common welfare of everyone on Earth. 

NASA's Mercury 7 astronauts
NASA's Mercury 7 astronauts On April 9, 1959, NASA introduced its first astronaut class, the Mercury 7. Front row, left to right: Walter M. Schirra, Jr., Donald K. "Deke" Slayton, John H. Glenn, Jr., and M. Scott Carpenter; back row, Alan B. Shepard, Jr., Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom, and L. Gordon Cooper, Jr.Image: NASA

The U.S. government initially assembled NASA by transferring programs and resources from other agencies. The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), a public organization dedicated to basic research, served as NASA’s basic foundation. Then the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology came under its jurisdiction, too. 

NASA grew even further under President John F. Kennedy. The U.S. began investing more in NASA’s human spaceflight programs, and over the course of the 1960s, NASA began to take its modern shape. Just a little over 10 years after the agency was created, it made history by landing men on the Moon. 

NASA's budget by major program. Source: Space Policy Online FY2020 Fact Sheet.

Your Guide to NASA's Budget

How big is NASA's budget right now? What was it like in the past? How does it compare to the rest of government spending? These answers, as well as charts, raw data, and original sourcing, are contained within.

"How Much Would You Pay for the Universe?"

NASA's Mars science exploration budget is being decimated, we are not going back to the Moon, and plans for astronauts to visit Mars are delayed until the 2030s -- on funding not yet allocated, overseen by a congress and president to be named later.

Planetary Society Statement on Proposed Cuts to Planetary Science Budget

The Planetary Society is deeply troubled with the priorities reflected in NASA's FY13 budget. If implemented, it will portend grave consequences for our nation's ability to conduct deep-space science missions and could irreversibly erode unique aspects of the space industrial base needed for such missions.

Notes from EPSC/DPS NASA Night

It's already the last day of the DPS/EPSC meeting in Nantes, France, and I've fallen seriously behind on writing up my notes. I thought I'd get some less pleasant notes out of the way before I returned to science.

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