In the early years of the cold war, enter Kelly Johnson and an clean sheet of paper--long enough to accommodate an 80-foot wingspan.
Some pilots want as little as possible between them and the sky.
Ernest Allison didn't care about politics--he just wanted to run an airline.
If the Russians can't supply the space station service module, the U.S. Navy has an off-the-shelf backup.
In the Arctic, the Royal Canadian Mounties swap their twin-engine de Havilland Otters for Pilatus PC-12s.
The Russians made their first cosmonaut a hero. Did they really know him?
Alan Barlett Shepard Jr., 1923-1998
The U.S. Marine Corps' sword gets a brand-new edge.
The airplane that hovers like a helicopter.
With so many parties lusting after the Navy's old warbirds, custody battles are flaring up everywhere.
Designing a spacesuit for Mars begins with one small step for man--and a whole bunch of little steps for a guy in a spacesuit.
In the remote highlands of Laos, U.S. Air Force pilots fought a secret war
Forget leather wallets and potholders. At this camp, the crfts project is really a keeper.
Independence, Kansas, is growing a new crop: the light airplane.
The fierce temperatures and extreme pressures required of the space shuttle main engine gave its engineers it a devil of a time
Flying Wild Weasel missions involved a variety of airframes but just one philosophy: Do unto SAMS before they do unto you.
What kind of scoops await TV reporters in the air over Manhattan?
Lost, then found, during the second world war, the Ace of Aces gave war-weary Americans something to cheer about.
The latest X-plane, the X-38, is an unmanned prototype of the space station crew's rescue vehicle. The biggest challenge? To get a lifing body to land gently in case injured astronauts are onboard.
Why cosmonauts returning from space face a chilly reception.
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