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The worm is back. NASA’s sleek and wavy logo from the 1970s is set to make its return on a SpaceX Falcon 9 scheduled to launch in May – the first to carry astronauts to the International Space ...
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) 1970s "worm" logo will head to orbit once more in 2020.
The NASA logo known as the 'worm' is back for good and will take its place alongside the affectionally named "meatball" logo.
The new old logo, dropped in the 1990s in favor of a more vintage brand, will adorn a SpaceX rocket that is to carry astronauts to the space station in May.
The "worm," NASA's former logo that was retired 30 years ago, has taken over the first mission to fly astronauts to orbit from a U.S.-based launchpad in nearly a decade.
Among the youth apparel at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, which features bibs and T-shirts that say “future astronaut,” are onesies with the worm logo.
So NASA introduced the “worm,” as it was derogatorily called at first, to complement the round meatball logo, which was more difficult to read and see at a distance.
NASA's worm logo is adorning the rockets and spacecraft of the Artemis 2 moon mission. The astronaut mission will fly to the moon in 2025 or so.
Decades after sending it to design purgatory, the space agency celebrates a logo it still calls the worm.
NASA is bringing back its historic worm logo to decorate the first crew-bearing spacecraft traveling to the moon in decades for the agency's Artemis II mission.
The worm is back. NASA’s sleek and wavy logo from the 1970s is set to make its return on a SpaceX Falcon 9 scheduled to launch in May – the first to carry astronauts to the International Space ...
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