Topic: Aerospace » Aerospace References

Aerospace References

Books and films about air and space
Results 1 - 20 of 85

Lunar History For Sale

A 16th-century telescope, Lunar Orbiter mission documents, early views of deep space, and more go on auction this week.
December 03, 2012 | By Rebecca Maksel

Fly-Powered Planes and Other Oddities

Oddball items at the National Air and Space Museum.
October 31, 2012 | By Rebecca Maksel

Hollywood’s Spacesuits

A sci-fi historian’s guide to movie spacesuits, from wacky to realistic.
September 13, 2012 | By Diane Tedeschi

One Giant Leap for Spider-kind

A jumping spider finds that hunting in zero-g is not a problem.
July 31, 2012 | By Tony Reichhardt

Martians Among Us

In this rowdy assembly, you'll find at least one you know.
July 2012 | By The Editors

America by Air

Summer at the Smithsonian

Planning a visit to the Museum? We provide some helpful hints.
July 2012 | By Rebecca Maksel

Human-Powered Helicopter Team Goes for Record

Can Gamera II stay airborne for 60 seconds? Tune in on Friday.
June 22, 2012 | By Tony Reichhardt

Student Rocketry Challenge Blasts Off

Winners take home big prizes (and compete to be the next generation of aerospace leadership) in the Team America Rocketry Challenge.
May 11, 2012 | By Heather Goss

The Bone Yard Project

Street art revives ancient airplanes.
April 2012 | By Heather Goss

Buzz Lightyear’s New Home

A well-traveled toy enters the Smithsonian collection.
March 29, 2012 | By Rebecca Maksel

Stay Tuned

A new emergency warning system will be tested on Wednesday -- 60 years after another radio network warned Americans of Cold War air raids.
November 07, 2011 | By Roger Mola

With telescopes both inside and out, Museum educators use a variety of filters to show visitors spots on the sun, craters on the moon, and the phases of Venus.

In the Museum: The People’s Observatory

Bringing telescopes where the people are.
November 2011 | By Rebecca Maksel

Viewport: From the Director

Something New Under the Sun
November 2011 | By J.R. Dailey

Stop Stall-ing

When pilots make a bad landing they don’t blame their bankers. So why do bankers, hacks, and Capitol Hill flaks use a beloved aviation term to malign the national economy?
October 20, 2011 | By Roger Mola

“Smithsonian’s Stars” at the Museum

Volcanic activity on the moon, traveling to asteroids, and crashing galaxies are a few of the topics covered in free lectures at the National Air & Space Museum.
October 05, 2011 | By Heather Goss

By 1944, Ernest Taylor Pyle (in Normandy, France) had won millions of loyal readers and a Pulitzer.

On the Wing and On the Ground

Ernie Pyle's aviation and war dispatches.
September 16, 2011 | By Rebecca Maksel

Remembering 9/11 at American History

Each day this week until September 11, the National Museum of American History is displaying artifacts recovered from the horrific crash of United Airlines Flight 93 a decade ago...
September 07, 2011 | By Roger Mola

Viewport: Across the Country in 49 Days

September 2011 | By J.R. Dailey

An emotional Gene Breiner (at lectern, with daughter Joyce and General Jack Dailey, director of the National Air and Space Museum) donated Plane Jane to the Museum this past June in hopes of inspiring future pilots.

In the Museum: A Fleet’s Final Flight

A civilian flight trainer enters the collections.
September 2011 | By Rebecca Maksel

At the Black Sheep Squadron

Reviews & Previews: Prodigal Son

A troubled man, Gregory Boyington found redemption commanding a U.S. Marine fighter squadron in the South Pacific.
September 2011 | By Phil Scott


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