Topic: Aerospace » Governmental Aerospace Programs » Space Programs

Space Programs

NASA, Soviet and Russian space programs and the International Space Station
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Discarding Shuttle: The Hidden Cost

On February 15, 2011 a symposium entitled “U.S. Human Spaceflight: Continuity and Stability” was held at Rice University’s James A. Baker Institute of Public Policy.  Organized by George Abbey, the resident space expert at the Baker Institute, one might have suspected that it would be Shuttle-centr...
March 01, 2011 | By Paul D. Spudis

A Bottle of Nothing

Call it a thought experiment, a way to engage the public, or an expensive waste of time.Either way, the "Message in a Bottle" task on yesterday's spacewalk outside the International Space Station was one of the more unusual chores ever by an astronaut. At the behest of the Japanese Space Agency JAX...
March 01, 2011 | By Tony Reichhardt

The Soyuz docking assembly

How Things Work: Soyuz-Station Docking

In orbit, it’s all about connections.
March 2011 | By Michael Klesius

Yuri Gagarin

Star City at 50

Change comes to the place where spaceflight was born.
March 2011 | By Michael Cassutt

<i>Atlantis</i> as seen from the International Space Station in February 2001.

Meet the Orbiters

A fleet of winged spacecraft, the likes of which we'll never see again.
March 01, 2011 | By Michael Klesius

Vision statements for non-Visionaries

A seemingly trivial event has revealed some schadenfreude about NASA, along with a lot of irritation.  Apparently (as is their wont) the fertile minds running our national space agency decided that the time has come (once again) for a new and improved vision statement – out with the old and in with...
February 23, 2011 | By Paul D. Spudis

Photo Op for Soyuz

Busy days in Earth orbit.Space Shuttle Discovery is set to make its last voyage tomorrow, with liftoff planned for 4:50 p.m. Florida time. If all goes according to plan, Europe's Johannes Kepler unmanned cargo vehicle will have docked with the space station earlier in the day (at 10:45 U.S. Eastern...
February 23, 2011 | By Tony Reichhardt

"The Martian Lord of Creation"

"Those who have never seen a living Martian can scarcely imagine the strange horror of its appearance.... Even at this first encounter, this first glimpse, I was overcome with disgust and dread." —H.G. Wells, War of the Worlds, 1898.Wells wasn't alone in thinking Red Planet Dwellers would be a comp...
February 10, 2011 | By Rebecca Maksel

The Last Flight Before Challenger

It was "the end of innocence," according to veteran space shuttle commander Hoot Gibson—the last flight before the Challenger tragedy, which shocked the nation less than two weeks later and changed the course of the shuttle program.On that evening, though, 25 years ago exactly, the mood was all upb...
January 18, 2011 | By Tony Reichhardt

HEFT, Lies and Videotape

A real comedy of errors and misunderstandings collided this week between the new NASA Authorization Act of 2010 and the agency’s Human Exploration Framework Team (HEFT) Congressionally mandated 90-day report (their initial findings on how to implement agency direction).  Though flush with the usua...
January 14, 2011 | By Paul D. Spudis

Operation IceBridge

Had you heard about it? It's a NASA mission, the largest airborne survey ever carried out to measure Earth's polar ice. Scientists plan to build a three-dimensional model of Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets, ice shelves, and sea ice in an effort to bridge the gap in polar observations by one NASA sa...
January 11, 2011 | By Mike Klesius

Regolith, The “Other” Lunar Resource

In civil engineering, one of the most important material resources on Earth is “construction aggregate” – the sand, gravel and cement building materials that make up the infrastructure of modern industrial life.  Aggregate is easily one of the biggest, most valuable economic resources of all mined ...
January 05, 2011 | By Paul D. Spudis

Thomas Keilig manages SOFIA’s telescope and science instruments

A 747 for Star-gazing

How engineers altered a jumbo jet to carry the world's biggest airborne telescope.
January 2011 | By Trudy E. Bell

The people who flew on the shuttle

Shuttlenauts

The faces of the Space Shuttle Era.
January 2011 | By Tony Reichhardt

Rare Views Inside the Soyuz

I was surprised by these photos, but I shouldn't have been.Most pictures of Russian space crews in the Soyuz TMA vehicle show them squished together like sardines, sitting side by side on their launch "couches." I've always wondered how they can move their arms, let alone get anything done, during ...
December 22, 2010 | By Tony Reichhardt

Scott Kelly's Home Video

Lots of space station astronauts have narrated video tours of their digs in space. This one, by current ISS commander Scott Kelly, struck me as more intimate, like a friend showing you around his new house:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4dG9vSyUFQSpeaking of Kelly, the recent slip of his twin brot...
December 21, 2010 | By Tony Reichhardt

Can we afford to return to the Moon?

We are almost at the end of a year that has seen major changes in our space program.  We have in hand a report from a “blue ribbon” Presidential committee that concluded that Project Constellation, the architecture NASA had chosen to implement the Vision for Space Exploration, was not affordable at...
December 21, 2010 | By Paul D. Spudis

New Light on the Lunar Poles

A new image released this week by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera Team shows the lighting conditions of the south pole of the Moon.  This new data supports the conclusions of many previous studies that areas exist on the Moon that are illuminated by the sun for more than one-half the lunar ...
December 17, 2010 | By Paul D. Spudis

The Astronaut's Husband

The second half of the space station Expedition 26 crew headed off to work this afternoon, as Russian Dmitry Kondratyev, Italian Paolo Nespoli, and American Cady Coleman were launched on the Soyuz TMA-20 spacecraft from Baikonur, Kazakhstan. Coleman, a two-time shuttle astronaut, began her six-mont...
December 15, 2010 | By Tony Reichhardt

In From the Cold

Like all good spooks, the U.S. Air Force's X-37 orbital spaceplane came in from the cold—in the middle of the night, of course—on December 3 after a seven-month inaugural orbital test flight. It's shown here at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, its primary landing spot, shortly after touchdo...
December 06, 2010 | By Mike Klesius


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