Sarah Lewin
Sarah Lewin started writing for Space.com in June of 2015 as a Staff Writer and became Associate Editor in 2019 . Her work has been featured by Scientific American, IEEE Spectrum, Quanta Magazine, Wired, The Scientist, Science Friday and WGBH's Inside NOVA. Sarah has an MA from NYU's Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program and an AB in mathematics from Brown University. When not writing, reading or thinking about space, Sarah enjoys musical theatre and mathematical papercraft. She is currently Assistant News Editor at Scientific American. You can follow her on Twitter @SarahExplains.
Latest articles by Sarah Lewin
This Epic R2-D2 Observatory is Totally the Droid We've Been Looking For
By Sarah Lewin published
Germany's Zweibrücken Observatory bears a striking resemblance to a beloved "Star Wars" sidekick.
NASA Aims to Accelerate SLS Megarocket for 2024 Moon Push
By Sarah Lewin published
NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said that speeding up production of NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) megarocket is absolutely essential to getting humans to the moon by 2024.
Visit the Heart of the Milky Way in This 360-Degree, 4K Simulation (Video)
By Sarah Lewin published
Put yourself at the center of an ever-changing Milky Way with this new immersive video of the galaxy's core.
'Tiamat's Wrath' Builds Up to Grand Finale for 'Expanse' Books
By Sarah Lewin published
The most dangerous thing in space exploration is the humans that do the exploring — right up until it isn't.
Whirling 'Cannonball' Pulsar Flees Supernova Site at Epic Speed
By Sarah Lewin published
A supernova explosion flung out a super-dense, whirling stellar core, sending it streaking across space at almost 2.5 million miles per hour with a glowing trail 13 light-years long in its wake.
You Can Watch SpaceX's Starship Hopper Tests Live Via a South Texas Surf School
By Sarah Lewin published
SpaceX's first tests of its prototype Starship may start soon — and you can watch them live online.
Queen Guitarist Brian May Scores Ultima Thule Flyby Time-Lapse Video
By Sarah Lewin published
An ethereal track by Queen lead guitarist Brian May accompanies the awe-inspiring time-lapse view from NASA's New Horizons flyby of a distant solar system object.
Phobos' Shadow: Experience an Eclipse on Mars with NASA's InSight Lander
By Sarah Lewin published
Exclusive 'Chasing the Moon' Clip Spotlights Poppy Northcutt, NASA's 1st Woman in Mission Control
By Sarah Lewin published
An exclusive new clip from the upcoming PBS documentary "Chasing the Moon" profiles the challenges and triumphs of Poppy Northcutt, the first woman to work in Mission Control.
Trump's 2020 NASA Budget Will Take US from Moon to Mars, Agency Chief Says
By Sarah Lewin published
NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine praised the proposed 2020 budget from the Trump administration, describing how the budget will help the agency reach the moon, and then continue on to Mars
Lights! Cameras! Apollo 11! Director Reveals Inside Look at Epic Moon Landing Documentary
By Sarah Lewin published
At Oscars, 'First Man' Lands Win, Brian May Rocks Out with Queen
By Sarah Lewin published
The Neil Armstrong biopic "First Man" took home an Academy Award for visual effects this year, highlighting its ultra-realistic technical rendering of NASA's Apollo missions and training exercises.
In Photos: SpaceX Falcon 9 Launches Israeli Moon Lander, Indonesian Satellite
By Sarah Lewin published
'The Expanse' Seasons 1-3 Dock at Amazon Prime
By Sarah Lewin published
Spin up the drum and settle in for a while — the first three seasons of "The Expanse" have arrived on Amazon Prime.
Satellite Photos Show Evidence of Iranian Rocket Launch. But Did It Fail?
By Sarah Lewin published
Satellite images from the company DigitalGlobe reveal a likely launch of an Iranian satellite between Feb. 5 and 6.
Last Light: Here's the Final View from NASA's Planet-Hunting Kepler Space Telescope
By Sarah Lewin published
Scientists Are Creating Mock Meteorite Crashes in a Lab. Here's Why.
By Sarah Lewin published
Hundreds or millions of years after a meteorite smashes into Earth, researchers are left analyzing the impact site to figure out what happened.
Coffee Lovers May Someday Brew Their Java with Space-Roasted Beans
By Sarah Lewin published
There's gourmet coffee, and then there's coffee roasted by the searing heat of re-entry into Earth's atmosphere from the edge of space.
Once Around the Sun! NASA's Parker Solar Probe Aces 1st Trip Around Our Star
By Sarah Lewin published
NASA's Parker Solar Probe has completed its first loop around the sun and entered the second of 24 planned orbits.
Saturn's Biggest Moon Titan May Bake Its Own Atmosphere
By Sarah Lewin published
The dense atmosphere roiling on Saturn's largest moon, Titan, may come from organic material baking in the moon's interior.
'First Man,' 'Solo' Get Tech Nominations for 2019 Oscars
By Sarah Lewin published
No big nominations, but space films "First Man" and "Solo" have a few effects-focused nods this Oscar season.
Once Upon a Time on Ryugu: Asteroid Features (and Its Boulders) Get Storybook Names
By Sarah Lewin published
The Hayabusa-2 team has introduced fanciful new names for the features found at the top-shaped asteroid Ryugu, including the first-ever outer-space boulders to get official names.
NASA's Cassini Saturn Probe Makes Cameo in 'Star Trek: Discovery' Season 2 Premiere
By Sarah Lewin published
Viewers watching "Star Trek: Discovery" last night (Jan. 17) were treated to a more realistic, awe-inspiring view of Saturn's rings, courtesy of the real-world Cassini spacecraft.
Watch Japan Launch a Meteor-Shower-Making Mini-Satellite and More Tonight!
By Sarah Lewin published
A Japanese Epsilon rocket will launch a suite of seven experimental satellites this evening (Jan. 17), including one little cubesat that will test out creating artificial meteors.
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