Shuttles

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Fear Factor

Panic attacks in an airliner? Try a smaller airplane, with a friend as your pilot.
January 2013 | By Jeremy Davis

The Last Shuttle Flight

On board Atlantis, the closing of an era.
January 2013 | By Tony Reichhardt

Final Four

An STS-135 photo album
November 16, 2012 | By Tony Reichhardt

Single Room, Earth View

America's first woman in space describes the beauty of Earth from orbit.
July 2012 | By Sally Ride

America by Air

Summer at the Smithsonian

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

The Sierra Nevada Corporation

Certified Safe

Planning to operate a taxi service for NASA astronauts? Here’s what’s required.
November 16, 2011 | By Andrew Chaikin

A Babe Bee that powered countless aircraft models hitched a ride to space.

Flights & Fancy: What Would You Send to Orbit?

Mementoes in an astronaut's luggage.
November 2011 | By Terry Dunn

Spacefrog

On the Orbiting of Species

NASA animal research practices have come a long way since the days of Able and Baker.
October 2011 | By Mark Betancourt

No, it never flew. But every shuttle astronaut, including the last (STS-135

Free Shuttle Artifacts!

The four orbiters are already taken, but thousands more shuttle-related items are still available—at no cost.
August 29, 2011 | By Mark Betancourt

Top Ten Shuttle Memories

Highlights from America's longest-lived space program.
July 08, 2011 | By Tony Reichhardt

NASA Administrator Charles F. Bolden Jr.

A & S Interview: Charles Bolden

NASA's 12th Administrator talks about commercial space, flying fast, and the shuttle's legacy.
July 2011 | By Linda Shiner

Space Shuttle Endeavour (STS-134) makes its final landing at the Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF) at Kennedy Space Center, Wednesday, June 1, 2011, in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Endeavour, completing a 16-day mission to outfit the International Space Station. Endeavour spent 299 days in space and traveled more than 122.8 million miles during its 25 flights. It launched on its first mission on May 7, 1992. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)

Ground Effect

Landing a shuttle while re-adapting to gravity can be disorienting. Now there's a way to simulate it on the ground.
May 31, 2011 | By Mark Betancourt

Hairstyles of the Astronauts

Weightlessness does wonders for your 'do. Vote on your favorite zero-g look.
May 19, 2011 | By Rebecca Maksel and Tony Reichhardt

<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

John Young (right) and Robert Crippen run through checklists during a dress rehearsal in March 1981, a month before the first space shuttle launch.

Astronaut Stories: The World’s First Spaceplane

Shuttle crews from the 1980s recall how their new vehicle took some getting used to.
February 28, 2011 | By The Editors

Dom Gorie looks out <i>Discovery</i>

Shuttle Home Movies

Highlights from 30 years of astronaut videos, filmed on location in Earth orbit.
February 28, 2011 | By The Editors

<b><i>Time was running out.</b></i> With the space shuttle program ending, <a href="http://www.darack.com/"target="_new">veteran writer and photographer Ed Darack</a> knew he’d have to hurry if he wanted to shoot a shuttle launch—especially a nighttime launch.

<br><br>In February 2010, Darack had the opportunity to photograph space shuttle <i>Endeavour</i>‘s last-scheduled night flight. Click on the thumbnail images at right to read more about his Space Coast road trip.

<br><br>“To me,” writes Darack, “the most memorable image of the first shuttle launch after the <i>Challenger</i> disaster is an iconic photograph taken in September 1988 by <a href="http://www.ressmeyer.com/target="_new">Roger Ressmeyer</a> (and published as a two-page spread in <i>Time</i> magazine) <a href="http://www.corbisimages.com/Enlargement/Enlargement.aspx?id=RR006035&tab=details&caller=searchtarget="_new">of a flock of birds taking flight above a marsh as the space shuttle <i>Discovery</i> rises above launch pad 39B.</a> It’s an inspirational image, one that made me realize I should try to photograph a shuttle launch myself.” 

<br><br>This shot: a nighttime view of the countdown clock and the distant Pad 39A with <i>Endeavour</i> awaiting launch.

Night Launch

Adventures of a first-time shuttle photographer.
October 13, 2010 | By Ed Darack

The space shuttle’s cargo bay is more than just a shipping container. It’s also a workspace for spacewalkers.

The Truck

Satellites, experiments, space station parts - the space shuttle hauled it all.
August 2010 | By Paul Hoversten

CAUSE FOR REFLECTION: The last scheduled night launch of the space shuttle program roused James Vernacotola in the predawn hours of February 8.

Sightings: Cause for Reflection

Endeavour lights up the sky—and water—in Florida.
July 2010 | By The Editors

The shuttle main engine is the most tested large rocket engine in the world.

Evolution of the Space Shuttle

How 30 years changed the world's most complex flying machine.
July 2010 | By Michael Klesius


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