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Aviation Boatswain's Mate (Fuels) 3rd Class Matthew Olicia tests JP5 fuel for sediment and water aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Kearsarge (LHD 3).

In Orbiter Processing Facility bay 3, STS-106 Mission Specialists Yuri I. Malenchenko (left) and Edward T. Lu (center) familiarize themselves with equipment in the payload bay of Space Shuttle orbiter Atlantis with the help of KSC employees as part of Crew Equipment Interface Test (CEIT) activities for their mission. The other crew members are Commander Terrence W. Wilcutt, Pilot Scott D. Altman, and Mission Specialists Daniel C. Burbank, Boris V. Morukov and Richard A. Mastracchio. Malenchenko and Morukov represent the Russian Aviation and Space Agency. On the 11-day mission, the seven-member crew will perform support tasks on orbit, transfer supplies and prepare the living quarters in the newly arrived Zvezda Service Module for the first long-duration crew, dubbed "Expedition One," which is due to arrive at the Station in late fall. STS-106 is scheduled to launch Sept. 8, 2000, at 8:31 a.m. EDT from Launch Pad 39B KSC-00pp0998

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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- In the Spacecraft Assembly and Encapsulation Facility -2 (SAEF-2), Chris Voorhees (front) watches while Satish Krishnan (back) places a Mars microprobe on a workstand. Two microprobes will hitchhike on the Mars Polar Lander, scheduled to be launched Jan. 3, 1999, aboard a Delta II rocket. The solar-powered spacecraft is designed to touch down on the Martian surface near the northern-most boundary of the south pole in order to study the water cycle there. The lander also will help scientists learn more about climate change and current resources on Mars, studying such things as frost, dust, water vapor and condensates in the Martian atmosphere. The Mars microprobes, called Deep Space 2, are part of NASA's New Millennium Program. They will complement the climate-related scientific focus of the lander by demonstrating an advanced, rugged microlaser system for detecting subsurface water. Such data on polar subsurface water, in the form of ice, should help put limits on scientific projections for the global abundance of water on Mars KSC-98pc1642

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Bitburg-Prüm County Deutsches Rotes Kreuz volunteers

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Bitburg-Prüm County Deutsches Rotes Kreuz volunteers process COVID-19 nasal swabs at a COVID-19 testing facility set up at the former Bitburg Air Base Commissary, Bitburg, Germany, April 10, 2020. The tests were purchased by the county and made available to German citizens. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Alex Miller)

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germany usafe spangdahlem air base usaf covid 19 readyaf covid 19 eucom 52 mdg airman 1st class alex miller 52nd fighter wing public affairs rp 52nd mdg visits bitburg covid 19 testing facility dvids high resolution
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10/04/2020
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Defense Visual Information Distribution Service
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https://www.dvidshub.net/
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Public Domain Dedication. Public Use Notice of Limitations: https://www.dvidshub.net/about/copyright

label_outline Explore Airman 1st Class Alex Miller, Covid 19 Eucom, Spangdahlem Air Base

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germany usafe spangdahlem air base usaf covid 19 readyaf covid 19 eucom 52 mdg airman 1st class alex miller 52nd fighter wing public affairs rp 52nd mdg visits bitburg covid 19 testing facility dvids high resolution