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STS-130: Delivering a Room w …
Thanks to Endeavour and the …
02/26/2010
Description Thanks to Endeavour and the STS-130 crew, International Space Station residents have a view of home like never before.
Date 02/26/2010
Apollo17 - On the Shoulders …
APOLLO 17: ON THE SHOULDERS …
1973
Title Apollo17 - On the Shoulders of_Giants
Description APOLLO 17: ON THE SHOULDERS OF GIANTS JSC 603 - (1973) - 28 1/2 Minutes Astronauts: Eugene A. Cernan, Ronald E. Evans, and Harrison H. Schmitt Launch date: December 7, 1972 A documentary view of the Apollo 17 journey to Taurus-Littrow, the final lunar landing mission in the Apollo Program. The film depicts the highlights of the mission and relates the Apollo Program to Skylab, the Apollo-Soyuz linkup, and the Space Shuttle. AWARDS: Chris Bronze Plaque Award, 21st Annual Columbus Film Festival, 1983 * Trophy of the Italian Department of Defense * 1st International Review of Cinema and TV Films on Flight, Milan, Italy, 1974 * Special Prize, 11th International Review of Technical, Scientific, and Educational Films, Pardubice, Czechoslovakia, 1973
Date 1973
Runway Rollout
With drag chute unfurled, sp …
11/27/2009
Title Runway Rollout
Description With drag chute unfurled, space shuttle Atlantis lands on Runway 33 at the Shuttle Landing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida after 11 days in space, completing the 4.5-million mile STS-129 mission. Image credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett Nov. 27, 2009
Date 11/27/2009
Flight Day 10
The International Space Stat …
11/30/2009
Title Flight Day 10
Description The International Space Station is photographed soon after the space shuttle Atlantis and the station began their post-undocking separation. Undocking of the two spacecraft occurred at 3:53 a.m. (CST) on Nov. 25, 2009. Image credit: NASA Nov. 25, 2009
Date 11/30/2009
Flight Day 9
This close-up view of a wate …
11/30/2009
Title Flight Day 9
Description This close-up view of a water bubble floating freely on the middeck of space shuttle Atlantis shows a refracted image of astronaut Leland Melvin, STS-129 mission specialist. Image credit: NASA Nov. 24, 2009
Date 11/30/2009
IBEX Heliosphere Map - 2.8 t …
The Interstellar Boundary Ex …
10/15/09
Description The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission is a NASA-funded satellite that orbits Earth and maps the boundary of our Solar System from Earth's point of view looking outward. IBEX has completed the first all-sky maps of this boundary by detecting particles traveling inward from the boundary toward our region of the Solar System. The map appears to be oval in shape for the same reason that two-dimensional maps of spherical Earth look oval. The boundary of our Solar System is created by the interaction between charged particles from the Sun that are streaming outward, called the solar wind, and material between the stars, called the interstellar medium (ISM). The solar wind flows outward into space and carves out a protective bubble, called the heliosphere, in the ISM around our Solar System. At the boundary, the interactions between the solar wind particles and the ISM particles create energetic neutral atoms (ENAs). ENAs are particles with no charge that move very fast. Some of the ENAs happen to be traveling in just the right way so that they move inward through the Solar System toward Earth where IBEX can collect them. Using two sensors, called IBEX-Hi and IBEX-Lo, the spacecraft measures and counts these ENAs. The scientists can create maps of the boundary using this information. For each small area of the sky, IBEX has measured the number of ENAs coming from that direction. This map shows the distribution of ENAs ranging in energy from 2.8 to 5.6 keV. Red indicates the highest number of ENAs measured by the spacecraft. Yellow and green indicate lower numbers of ENAs, and blue and purple show the lowest number of ENAs.
Date 10/15/09
IBEX Heliosphere Map - 0.6 t …
The Interstellar Boundary Ex …
10/15/09
Description The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission is a NASA-funded satellite that orbits Earth and maps the boundary of our Solar System from Earth's point of view looking outward. IBEX has completed the first all-sky maps of this boundary by detecting particles traveling inward from the boundary toward our region of the Solar System. The map appears to be oval in shape for the same reason that two-dimensional maps of spherical Earth look oval. The boundary of our Solar System is created by the interaction between charged particles from the Sun that are streaming outward, called the solar wind, and material between the stars, called the interstellar medium (ISM). The solar wind flows outward into space and carves out a protective bubble, called the heliosphere, in the ISM around our Solar System. At the boundary, the interactions between the solar wind particles and the ISM particles create energetic neutral atoms (ENAs). ENAs are particles with no charge that move very fast. Some of the ENAs happen to be traveling in just the right way so that they move inward through the Solar System toward Earth where IBEX can collect them. Using two sensors, called IBEX-Hi and IBEX-Lo, the spacecraft measures and counts these ENAs. The scientists can create maps of the boundary using this information. For each small area of the sky, IBEX has measured the number of ENAs coming from that direction. This map shows the distribution of ENAs ranging in energy from 0.6 to 1.0 keV. Red indicates the highest number of ENAs measured by the spacecraft. Yellow and green indicate lower numbers of ENAs, and blue and purple show the lowest number of ENAs.
Date 10/15/09
IBEX Heliosphere Map - 1.3 t …
The Interstellar Boundary Ex …
10/15/09
Description The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission is a NASA-funded satellite that orbits Earth and maps the boundary of our Solar System from Earth's point of view looking outward. IBEX has completed the first all-sky maps of this boundary by detecting particles traveling inward from the boundary toward our region of the Solar System. The map appears to be oval in shape for the same reason that two-dimensional maps of spherical Earth look oval. The boundary of our Solar System is created by the interaction between charged particles from the Sun that are streaming outward, called the solar wind, and material between the stars, called the interstellar medium (ISM). The solar wind flows outward into space and carves out a protective bubble, called the heliosphere, in the ISM around our Solar System. At the boundary, the interactions between the solar wind particles and the ISM particles create energetic neutral atoms (ENAs). ENAs are particles with no charge that move very fast. Some of the ENAs happen to be traveling in just the right way so that they move inward through the Solar System toward Earth where IBEX can collect them. Using two sensors, called IBEX-Hi and IBEX-Lo, the spacecraft measures and counts these ENAs. The scientists can create maps of the boundary using this information. For each small area of the sky, IBEX has measured the number of ENAs coming from that direction. This map shows the distribution of ENAs ranging in energy from 1.3 to 2.4 keV. Red indicates the highest number of ENAs measured by the spacecraft. Yellow and green indicate lower numbers of ENAs, and blue and purple show the lowest number of ENAs.
Date 10/15/09
IBEX Heliosphere Map - 1.9 t …
The Interstellar Boundary Ex …
10/15/09
Description The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission is a NASA-funded satellite that orbits Earth and maps the boundary of our Solar System from Earth's point of view looking outward. IBEX has completed the first all-sky maps of this boundary by detecting particles traveling inward from the boundary toward our region of the Solar System. The map appears to be oval in shape for the same reason that two-dimensional maps of spherical Earth look oval. The boundary of our Solar System is created by the interaction between charged particles from the Sun that are streaming outward, called the solar wind, and material between the stars, called the interstellar medium (ISM). The solar wind flows outward into space and carves out a protective bubble, called the heliosphere, in the ISM around our Solar System. At the boundary, the interactions between the solar wind particles and the ISM particles create energetic neutral atoms (ENAs). ENAs are particles with no charge that move very fast. Some of the ENAs happen to be traveling in just the right way so that they move inward through the Solar System toward Earth where IBEX can collect them. Using two sensors, called IBEX-Hi and IBEX-Lo, the spacecraft measures and counts these ENAs. The scientists can create maps of the boundary using this information. For each small area of the sky, IBEX has measured the number of ENAs coming from that direction. This map shows the distribution of ENAs ranging in energy from 1.9 to 3.6 keV. Red indicates the highest number of ENAs measured by the spacecraft. Yellow and green indicate lower numbers of ENAs, and blue and purple show the lowest number of ENAs.
Date 10/15/09
IBEX Heliosphere Map - 0.9 t …
The Interstellar Boundary Ex …
10/15/09
Description The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission is a NASA-funded satellite that orbits Earth and maps the boundary of our Solar System from Earth's point of view looking outward. IBEX has completed the first all-sky maps of this boundary by detecting particles traveling inward from the boundary toward our region of the Solar System. The map appears to be oval in shape for the same reason that two-dimensional maps of spherical Earth look oval. The boundary of our Solar System is created by the interaction between charged particles from the Sun that are streaming outward, called the solar wind, and material between the stars, called the interstellar medium (ISM). The solar wind flows outward into space and carves out a protective bubble, called the heliosphere, in the ISM around our Solar System. At the boundary, the interactions between the solar wind particles and the ISM particles create energetic neutral atoms (ENAs). ENAs are particles with no charge that move very fast. Some of the ENAs happen to be traveling in just the right way so that they move inward through the Solar System toward Earth where IBEX can collect them. Using two sensors, called IBEX-Hi and IBEX-Lo, the spacecraft measures and counts these ENAs. The scientists can create maps of the boundary using this information. For each small area of the sky, IBEX has measured the number of ENAs coming from that direction. This map shows the distribution of ENAs ranging in energy from 0.9 to 1.5 keV. Red indicates the highest number of ENAs measured by the spacecraft. Yellow and green indicate lower numbers of ENAs, and blue and purple show the lowest number of ENAs.
Date 10/15/09
NASA's Spacecraft Chamber of …
2008 Videographer of the Yea …
Description 2008 Videographer of the Year, 2nd place, production category. By Michael McClare, GSFC.
Mode Training Exercises
2008 Videographer of the Yea …
Description 2008 Videographer of the Year, 1st place, production category. By Cory Huston, KSC.
Shuttle Processing Montage
2008 Videographer of the Yea …
Description 2008 Videographer of the Year, 1st place, documentation category. By Glenn Benson, KSC.
Segment for NASA 360, INDY C …
2008 Videographer of the Yea …
Description 2008 Videographer of the Year, 3rd place, production category. By Michael Bibbo, LaRC.
Nite and Day of a Shuttle
2008 Videographer of the Yea …
Description 2008 Videographer of the Year, 2nd place, documentation category. By Ben Smegelsky, KSC.
STS-125 HST SM4 Crew Trainin …
2008 Videographer of the Yea …
Description 2008 Videographer of the Year, 3rd place, documentation category. By Steve Blair, JSC, Bill Brassard, JSC, Mark Hubbard, GSFC, Chapman Mannschreck, JSC, Michael McClare, GSFC, Jon Stubblefield, JSC.
STS-125 Ferry Flight from Ed …
STS-125 Ferry Flight from Ed …
10/01/2009
Description STS-125 Ferry Flight from Edwards AFB to KSC DOC 02
Date 10/01/2009
Creator nasa
Beauty and Nature at KSC and …
Beauty and Nature at KSC and …
10/01/2009
Description Beauty and Nature at KSC and CCAFS DOC 03
Date 10/01/2009
Creator nasa
STS-127 Moves from the Pad 3 …
STS-127 Moves from the Pad 3 …
10/01/2009
Description STS-127 Moves from the Pad 39 B to Pad 39 A DOC 06
Date 10/01/2009
Creator nasa
International Space Station …
Astronaut Jeff Williams uses …
12/01/2009
Description Astronaut Jeff Williams uses two cameras to create a front and back view during a flythrough of the International Space Station. This video was captured in December of 2009.
Date 12/01/2009
Creator nasa
Ares Demonstration Motor 1 - …
This video was shot using Pa …
10/01/2009
Description This video was shot using Panasonic's DVC-Pro HD camera at ATK facilities in Promontory, Utah. The footage was included in the Ares Quarterly Progress Reports #11, #12 & #13.
Date 10/01/2009
Creator nasa
NASA 360 - Production Video …
NASA 360 traveled to Arizona …
10/01/2009
Description NASA 360 traveled to Arizona to cover NASA's analog testing of hardware going to the Moon and beyond. We interviewed several people and covered the LER, ATHLETE, and other various programs being tested in the desert. D-Rats, or Desert Rats was over a period of several days. We produced 3 different segments including a brief overview of the project as seen briefly in the clip provided. NASA 360 examines NASA's past, present and future to show how NASA has improved life on Earth and how NASA is helping develop and inspire technological innovation.
Date 10/01/2009
Creator nasa
Aerothermodynamics Lab Capab …
NASA Langley Research Center …
10/01/2009
Description NASA Langley Research Center's Aerothermodynamics Lab capabilities video.
Date 10/01/2009
Creator nasa
Lee R. Scherer
Lee R. Scherer was appointed …
11/13/08
Description Lee R. Scherer was appointed Director of the NASA Flight Research Center on October 11, 1971, a position he held until January 28, 1975. Mr. Scherer first worked with NASA in 1962 while still on active duty with the U.S. Navy as a Captain. Prior to his arriving at the Flight Research Center he was at NASA Headquarters' Office of Space Science and Applications, as Director of the Apollo Program for the scientific aspects of lunar explorations, Assistant Director of Lunar Programs, and Manager of the Lunar Orbiter Program from its inception in 1963 through its successful completion in 1967. Scherer graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1942. Most of Lee's 25-year Naval career was spent in aviation, including a tour flying carrier- based fighters and flight test experience with helicopters. Prior to entering the Naval Academy, he attended the University of Kentucky for one year. He received a second Bachelor of Science degree in aeronautical engineering in 1949 from the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School and his Master's degree in aeronautical engineering from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in 1950. Lee also attended the Summer of Industrial Management Studies program at the University of California at Los Angeles in 1949. Awards he has received include the NASA?s Exceptional Service Medal in 1967 and NASA's Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal in 1969.
Date 11/13/08
Comparison of Images
Comparison of high resolutio …
11/13/08
Description Comparison of high resolution image showing the Earth at LPI website and LOIRP image. Photo Credit: LOIRP
Date 11/13/08
Lunar Orbiter 1
The world's first view of Ea …
11/13/08
Description The world's first view of Earth as released to the public taken by a spacecraft from the vicinity of the Moon. The photo was transmitted to Earth by the United States Lunar Orbiter I and received at the NASA tracking station at Robledo De Chavela near Madrid, Spain. This crescent of the Earth was photographed August 23, 1966 at 16:35 GMT when the spacecraft was on its 16th orbit and just about to pass behind the Moon. Photo Credit: NASA / LOIRP
Date 11/13/08
Lunar Orbiter Spacecraft
Lunar Orbiter spacecraft on …
11/13/08
Description Lunar Orbiter spacecraft on display in the National Air and Space Museum, Washington DC. Image credit: SpaceRef Interactive
Date 11/13/08
Image Comparison
Comparison of newly retrieve …
11/13/08
Description Comparison of newly retrieved Lunar Orbiter imagery by LOIRP and high resolution scan of historic Lunar Orbiter photographs showing resolution enhancement. Photo credit: LOIRP
Date 11/13/08
Comparison
This image illustrates the d …
11/13/08
Description This image illustrates the difference between the original image and the Lunar Orbiter Image Recovery Project (LOIRP) data. The original image is on the bottom and LOIRP's image is on the top. Image credit: LOIRP
Date 11/13/08
NASA Chart
NASA chart from 1966. Image …
11/13/08
Description NASA chart from 1966. Image Credit: NASA
Date 11/13/08
LOIRP Moon
MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. -- NAS …
11/13/08
Description MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. -- NASA released a newly restored 42-year-old image of Earth on Thursday. The Lunar Orbiter 1 spacecraft took the iconic photograph of Earth rising above the lunar surface in 1966. Using refurbished machinery and modern digital technology, NASA produced the image at a much higher resolution than was possible when it was originally taken. The data may help the next generation of explorers as NASA prepares to return to the moon. Read press release Image Credit: NASA / LOIRP
Date 11/13/08
Thermal Protection System
Visitors to the Future Missi …
7/6/08
Description Visitors to the Future Missions tent learn about the Thermal Protection System (TPS) for the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle that will take astronaut crews to the International Space Station and will later return humans to the Moon.
Date 7/6/08
EVA Suit
This NASA exhibiter describe …
7/6/08
Description This NASA exhibiter describes features of the space suit that astronauts wear when they go on spacewalks.
Date 7/6/08
Infrared Images
Young visitors to the Space …
7/6/08
Description Young visitors to the Space Shuttle tent learn how NASA uses infra-red cameras on-orbit to investigate the Orbiter to determine if repairs are needed prior to coming home.
Date 7/6/08
ELVIS
This NASA exhibiter explains …
7/6/08
Description This NASA exhibiter explains how the Enhanced Launch Vehicle Imaging System (ELVIS) greatly increases the number and fidelity of views taken of each Shuttle launch as an added safety precaution established with Return to Flight in 2005.
Date 7/6/08
Astronaut Exercise
In the next 50 years, NASA p …
7/8/08
Description In the next 50 years, NASA plans to send astronauts to the Moon and Mars. These astronauts must follow a strenuous exercise program in-flight to prevent the health effects of space flight. These effects include decrease in bone and muscle mass, strength, sensory-motor function (i.e. balance), and the ability to perform aerobic exercise.
Date 7/8/08
Microgravity Drop Tower
Modern research-scale drop t …
7/8/08
Description Modern research-scale drop towers provide scientists with brief periods of low-gravity free-fall conditions in which a wide variety of scientific experiments can be conducted. This NASA exhibiter is demonstrating a portable microgravity drop tower that can be used to assist in science education in the classroom.
Date 7/8/08
ISS Battery
When the solar arrays of the …
7/8/08
Description When the solar arrays of the International Space Station are in the sun, nickel hydrogen batteries such as the one being demonstrated collect solar energy that is later used to power the Station when it is no longer within the Sun's "line-of-sight."
Date 7/8/08
Ranger Satellite Servicing M …
Ranger is a spaceflight qual …
7/8/08
Description Ranger is a spaceflight qualified dexterous robotic servicing system that was primarily designed per the requirements for robotic servicing of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The fifth and final Space Shuttle servicing mission to the Hubble Space Telescope is scheduled for October 2008.
Date 7/8/08
Postcards From The Field
The NASA Team on the last da …
7/30/08
Description The NASA Team on the last day of the Festival.
Date 7/30/08
Big Blue Marble
NASA's mission has always be …
4/22/08
Description NASA's mission has always been to explore, to discover and to understand the world in which we live from the unique vantage point of space, and to share our newly gained perspectives with the public. That spirit of sharing remains true today as NASA operates 18 of the most advanced Earth-observing satellites ever built, helping scientists make some of the most detailed observations ever made of our world. Image Credit: NASA
Date 4/22/08
Neither Perpendicular nor Pa …
Most ISS images are nadir, i …
11/3/08
Description Most ISS images are nadir, in which the center point of the image is directly beneath the lens of the camera, but this one is not. This highly oblique image of northwestern African captures the curvature of the Earth and shows its atmosphere. The Earth's atmosphere is composed of 78 percent nitrogen, 21 percent oxygen and 1 percent other constituents, and it shields us from nearly all harmful radiation coming from the sun and other stars. It also protects us from meteors, most of which burn up before they can strike the planet. Affected by changes in solar activity, the upper atmosphere contributes to weather and climate on Earth. Image Credit: NASA/JPL/UCSD/JSC
Date 11/3/08
Earthrise
Apollo 8, the first manned m …
12/24/08
Description Apollo 8, the first manned mission to the moon, entered lunar orbit on Christmas Eve, Dec. 24, 1968. That evening, the astronauts--Commander Frank Borman, Command Module Pilot Jim Lovell, and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders--held a live broadcast from lunar orbit, in which they showed pictures of the Earth and moon as seen from their spacecraft. Said Lovell, "The vast loneliness is awe-inspiring and it makes you realize just what you have back there on Earth." They ended the broadcast with the crew taking turns reading from the book of Genesis. Visit the Apollo 8 page for audio and video of the historic mission. Image Credit: NASA
Date 12/24/08
TIROS' First Look
The first photo of Earth fro …
4/2/09
Description The first photo of Earth from a weather satellite, taken by the TIROS-1 satellite on April 1, 1960. Early photographs provided new information on cloud systems, including spiral formations associated with large storms, immediately proving their value to meteorologists.
Date 4/2/09
Whole Earth
This image from Apollo 17, a …
4/2/09
Description This image from Apollo 17, and others like it, captured whole hemispheres of water, land and weather. This photo was the first view of the south polar ice cap. Almost the entire coastline of Africa is visible, along with the Arabian Peninsula.
Date 4/2/09
Earth and Moon
This picture of the Earth an …
4/2/09
Description This picture of the Earth and Moon in a single frame was taken by the Galileo spacecraft from about 3.9 million miles away. Antarctica is visible through clouds (bottom). The Moon's far side is seen, the shadowy indentation in the dawn terminator is the south pole Aitken Basin, one of the largest and oldest lunar impact features.
Date 4/2/09
Earth at Night
This composite image, which …
4/2/09
Description This composite image, which has become a popular poster, shows a global view of Earth at night, compiled from over 400 satellite images. NASA researchers have used these images of nighttime lights to study weather around urban areas.
Date 4/2/09
Robot Over the Horizon
The Space Shuttle Endeavour' …
4/2/09
Description The Space Shuttle Endeavour's robotic arm hovers over Earth's horizon, backdropped by a starburst from the Sun. This photo was taken during the STS-77 shuttle mission in 1996.
Date 4/2/09
Ozone Hole
The Antarctic ozone hole rea …
4/2/09
Description The Antarctic ozone hole reached its annual maximum on Sept. 12, 2008, stretching over 27 million square kilometers, or 10.5 million square miles. The area is calculated using data from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument on NASA's Aura satellite. This is considered a "moderately large" ozone hole, according to NASA atmospheric scientist, Paul Newman. And while this year's ozone hole is the fifth largest on record, the amount of ozone depleting substances have decreased about 3.8% from peak levels in 2000. The largest ozone hole ever recorded occurred in 2006, at a size of 10.6 million square miles. NASA has been monitoring the status of the ozone layer through satellite observations since the 1970s.
Date 4/2/09
Endeavour is Home
Space shuttle Endeavour kick …
7/31/09
Description Space shuttle Endeavour kicks up dust as it touches down on Runway 15 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida to complete the 16-day, 6.5-million mile journey on the STS-127 mission to the International Space Station. Endeavour delivered the Japanese Experiment Module's Exposed Facility and the Experiment Logistics Module-Exposed Section to the International Space Station. The mission was the 29th flight to the station, the 23rd flight of Endeavour and the 127th in the Space Shuttle Program, as well as the 71st landing at Kennedy. Image credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett July 31, 2009
Date 7/31/09
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