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X-38 Prototype Technology Demonstrator for the Crew Return Vehicle (CRV) and Project Managers Bob Ba

Chris Ware, heavy mobile equipment mechanic supervisor,

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- On Launch Pad 17-B at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, workers maneuver the second stage of the Delta II launch vehicle onto the first stage for mating. The Delta II-Heavy, manufactured by the United Launch Alliance, is scheduled to launch the Dawn spacecraft on its 4-year flight to the asteroid belt. The Delta II-Heavy is the strongest rocket in the Delta II class. It will use three stages and nine solid-fueled booster rockets to propel Dawn on its way. A 9.5-foot payload fairing will protect the spacecraft from the heat and stresses of launch. Dawn's goal is to characterize the conditions and processes of the solar system's earliest epoch by investigating in detail the largest protoplanets that have remained intact since their formations: asteroid Vesta and the dwarf planet Ceres. They reside in the extensive zone between Mars and Jupiter together with many other smaller bodies, called the asteroid belt. Dawn is scheduled to launch July 7. Photo credit: NASA/Jack Pfaller KSC-07pd1515

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. -- A piece of equipment for Hubble Space Telescope Servicing mission is moved inside Hangar AE, Cape Canaveral. In the canister is the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). The ACS will increase the discovery efficiency of the HST by a factor of ten. It consists of three electronic cameras and a complement of filters and dispersers that detect light from the ultraviolet to the near infrared (1200 - 10,000 angstroms). The ACS was built through a collaborative effort between Johns Hopkins University, Goddard Space Flight Center, Ball Aerospace Corporation and Space Telescope Science Institute. The goal of the mission, STS-109, is to service the HST, replacing Solar Array 2 with Solar Array 3, replacing the Power Control Unit, removing the Faint Object Camera and installing the ACS, installing the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) Cooling System, and installing New Outer Blanket Layer insulation on bays 5 through 8. Mission STS-109 is scheduled for launch Feb. 14, 2002 KSC01pd1736

VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, CALIF. -- At Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, a technician on the work stand prepares the second stage of the Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL rocket to be mated to the first stage, at left, for the launch of NASA's Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere, or AIM, spacecraft. AIM is the seventh Small Explorers mission under NASA's Explorer Program. The program provides frequent flight opportunities for world-class scientific investigations from space within heliophysics and astrophysics. The AIM spacecraft will fly three instruments designed to study polar mesospheric clouds located at the edge of space, 50 miles above the Earth's surface in the coldest part of the planet's atmosphere. The mission's primary goal is to explain why these clouds form and what has caused them to become brighter and more numerous and appear at lower latitudes in recent years. AIM's results will provide the basis for the study of long-term variability in the mesospheric climate and its relationship to global climate change. AIM is scheduled to be mated to the Pegasus XL during the second week of April, after which final inspections will be conducted. Launch is scheduled for April 25. KSC-07pd0652

Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL Mate

NASA Dual Brayton Power System - Glenn Research Center History

TANK 6 - TANK 5 - CONTROL ROOM AREA OF THE ELECTRIC PROPULSION LABORATORY EPL

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – NASA's Radiation Belt Storm Probe A, enclosed in a protective shipping container, is positioned into the airlock of the Astrotech payload processing facility near NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida where Applied Physics Laboratory technicians will begin spacecraft testing and prelaunch preparations. The twin RBSP spacecraft arrived at Kennedy’s Shuttle Landing Facility in the cargo bay of a U.S. Air Force C-17 aircraft earlier in the day. The RBSP mission will help us understand the sun’s influence on Earth and near-Earth space by studying the Earth’s radiation belts on various scales of space and time. The RBSP instruments will provide the measurements needed to characterize and quantify the plasma processes that produce very energetic ions and relativistic electrons. The mission is part of NASA’s broader Living With a Star Program that was conceived to explore fundamental processes that operate throughout the solar system, and in particular those that generate hazardous space weather effects in the vicinity of Earth and phenomena that could impact solar system exploration. RBSP is scheduled to begin its mission of exploration of Earth's Van Allen Radiation Belts and the extremes of space weather after launch. Launch aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket is scheduled for August 23. For more information, visit http://www.nasa.gov/rbsp. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett KSC-2012-2637

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KC-135 AIRPLANE MICROGRAVITY FLIGHT

description

Zusammenfassung

KC-135 AIRPLANE MICROGRAVITY FLIGHT

NASA Identifier: GRC-C-1998-852

label_outline

Tags

NASA kc 135 Flugzeug Mikrogravitationsflug divids hohe Auflösung Glenn-Forschungszentrum Luftfahrtforschungsorganisation Flugzeug kc 135
date_range

Datum

1998
place

Lage

create

Quelle

Defense Visual Information Distribution Service
link

Link

https://www.dvidshub.net/
copyright

Copyright-info

Public Domain Dedication. Public Use Notice of Limitations: https://www.dvidshub.net/about/copyright

label_outline Explore Kc 135, Aviation Research Organization, Glenn Research Center

Aviation Boatswain's Mate (Handling) Airman Reshawn Orr aus Orlando überprüft das Öl von Flugzeugschleppern auf dem Flugdeck des Flugzeugträgers der Nimitz-Klasse USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74).

Die ursprüngliche Auffindungshilfe beschrieb dieses Foto wie folgt: Basis: USS John F. Kennedy (CV 67) Szene Major Command gezeigt: CV-67 Kameramann: PHAN (Aw) Grantez Stephens, Usn Veröffentlichungsstatus: Veröffentlicht an die Öffentlichkeit Kombinierte digitale Fotodateien des Militärischen Dienstes Justin W. Walker (AEAA), Aviation Electrician's Mate AIRMAN Apprentice (AEAA) der US Navy, überprüft den Widerstand auf einer Schaltkarte für eine elektronische Steuerungseinheit des S-3B Viking Flugzeugs, um sicherzustellen, dass sich die Ausrüstung innerhalb der Sicherheitsstandards befindet.

Schwedische Spetsberg-Expedition 1928, Band 4. Band 4 von 5 Dokumentationsalben der Schwedischen Spetsberg-Expedition 1928, bei der Umberto Nobile und die Besatzung des Luftschiffs Italia gerettet wurden. 41 Fotografien auf 25 Albumblättern montiert. Motiv: Porträt von Expeditionsteilnehmern und Crew auf dem Schiff Quest. Reise Narvik - Tromsö - Kings Bay / Ny-Aalesund - Hafen der Jungfrau. Menschen, Schiffe, Natur, Umgebung usw.

Eine F-16 Fighting Falcon Thunderbird erhält Treibstoff von

Oberst Mark Richey, 916th Air Refueling Wing Vice Commander,

AIRMAN First Class (A1C) Lewis Noriega, USAF, 437th Aircraft Generation Squadron (AGS), Charleston AFB, South Carolina, wartet das Flüssigsauerstoffsystem (LOX) auf einer C-17A Globemaster III auf der Fluglinie auf dem Luftwaffenstützpunkt Rhein-Main während der Operation ENDING FREEDOM

Xiomara Carrion, 18. Wing Judge Advocate Entlastung

Die ursprüngliche Auffindungshilfe beschrieb dieses Foto wie folgt: Basis: USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) Bediener der Szenenkamera: PH3 Borbely Veröffentlichungsstatus: Veröffentlicht an die Öffentlichkeit Kombinierte digitale Fotodateien des Militärischen Dienstes

Die ursprüngliche Auffindungshilfe beschrieb dieses Foto wie folgt: Betreff Betrieb / Serie: NOBLE ANVIL Stützpunkt: Idiotenflugplatz Staat: Sevilla Land: Spanien (ESP) Szenenkameramann: SRA Stan Parker, USAF Veröffentlichungsstatus: Veröffentlicht an die Öffentlichkeit Kombinierte digitale Fotodateien des Militärischen Dienstes Der Videograph der US-Luftwaffe SENIOR AIRMAN Justin Fairley filmt einen rollenden KC-135 Stratotanker in Moron Air Bae, Spanien am 21. März 1999. SRA Fairley wird dem 1ST Combat Camera Squadron, Charleston Air Force Base, South Carolina, zugewiesen. Diese Mission wird direkt von der Joint Task Force Noble Anvil unterstützt.

Die ursprüngliche Auffindungshilfe beschrieb dieses Foto wie folgt: Basis: USS Dwight D Eisenhower (CVN 69) Land: Atlantischer Ozean (AOC) Bediener der Szene-Kamera: PH2 Tracy Lee Didas Veröffentlichungsstatus: Veröffentlicht an die Öffentlichkeit Kombinierte digitale Fotodateien des Militärischen Dienstes

U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Tyler Miller, 18. Ausrüstungsgegenstand

Ordnungshüter heben mit einem HLU-196-Bombenzug eine Mark 56-Mine auf den Flügel eines S-3A Viking-Flugzeugs des Air Anti-U-Boot Squadron 31 (VS-31) an Bord des atomgetriebenen Flugzeugträgers USS DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER (CVN-69) während eines Manövers vor der Küste von North Carolina.

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NASA kc 135 Flugzeug Mikrogravitationsflug divids hohe Auflösung Glenn-Forschungszentrum Luftfahrtforschungsorganisation Flugzeug kc 135