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QCSEE QUIET CLEAN STOL EXPERIMENTAL ENGINE INSTALLATION ON HANGAR APRON

Space Transportation System, Space Shuttle Main Engine, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX

Members of the Directed Energy and Electric Weapon Systems Program Office fire a laser through a beam director on a Kineto Tracking Mount, controlled by a MK-15 Phalanx Close-In Weapons System.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - In Orbiter Processing Facility bay 3 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, (at left) one of three space shuttle main engines is being prepared for installation in space shuttle Discovery. Each engine is 14 feet long, weighs about 6,700 pounds, and is 7.5 feet in diameter at the end of the nozzle. Discovery is being processed for its next mission, STS-119, targeted for launch on Feb. 12, 2009. Discovery and its crew will deliver integrated truss structure 6 (S6) and solar arrays to the International Space Station. Photo credit: NASA/Dimitri Gerondidakis KSC-08pd2943

MOD-0A-1 200 KW KILOWATT WIND TURBINE AT THE FABRICATION SHOP

TRAVERSE RAKE FOR NOISE ACOUSTICAL TEST RIG

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - At a hangar near the Shuttle Landing Facility, or SLF, at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Chirold Epp, Johnson Space Center Project Manager for ALHAT, speaks to members of the media. In the background is the Morpheus prototype lander, which arrived at Kennedy on July 27. Testing of the prototype lander had been ongoing at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston in preparation for its first free-flight test at Kennedy Space Center. The SLF will provide the lander with the kind of field necessary for realistic testing, complete with rocks, craters and hazards to avoid. Morpheus utilizes an autonomous landing and hazard avoidance technology, or ALHAT, payload that will allow it to navigate to clear landing sites amidst rocks, craters and other hazards during its descent. Project Morpheus is one of 20 small projects comprising the Advanced Exploration Systems, or AES, program in NASA’s Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate. AES projects pioneer new approaches for rapidly developing prototype systems, demonstrating key capabilities and validating operational concepts for future human missions beyond Earth orbit. For more information on Project Morpheus, visit http://morpheuslander.jsc.nasa.gov/. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett KSC-2012-4169

Saturn V - Saturn Apollo Program

The crew on the Coast Guard Cutter Juniper regularly

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Expedition 51 Soyuz Assembly. NASA public domain image colelction.

description

Summary

nhq201704150002 (April 15, 2017) --- The Soyuz rocket and Soyuz MS-04 spacecraft is assembled at the Pad 1 complex at the Baikonur Cosmodrome on April 15, 2017, in Baikonur, Kazakhstan. Launch of the Soyuz MS-04 spacecraft is scheduled for April 20 Baikonur time and will send Expedition 51 Soyuz Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin of Roscosmos and Flight Engineer Jack Fischer of NASA into orbit to begin their four and a half month mission on the International Space Station. Photo Credit: (Roscosmos)

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Tags

baikonur cosmodrome expedition 51 expedition 51 preflight kazakhstan pad 1 complex soyuz assembly soyuz ms 04 soyuz rocket roscosmos johnson space center expedition soyuz high resolution rocket engines rocket technology nasa
date_range

Date

15/04/2017
place

Location

create

Source

NASA
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Link

https://images.nasa.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

label_outline Explore Expedition 51, Expedition 51 Preflight, Soyuz Ms 04

Expedition 40 Preflight. NASA public domain image colelction.

STS113-364-019 - STS-113 - Tip of the Soyuz Spacecraft seen during STS-113 rendezvous with ISS

STS071-126-007 - STS-071 - Soyuz spacecraft undocked from Mir space station

Expedition 35 Soyuz Rollout. NASA public domain image colelction.

S126E025243 - STS-126 - View of ISS, Docked Soyuz and Endeavour

Kazakhstan paratroopers are first into the drop zone as part of an international mass jump. Paratroopers from Kazakhstan, the United States and Turkey are descending into Kazakhstan to prepare for the the start of the Central Asian Peacekeeping Battalion (CENTRASBAT) 2000. The CENTRASBAT 2000 exercise is a multi-national, in the Spirit of Partnership for Peace, peacekeeping and humanitarian relief exercise sponsored by United States Central Command (US CENTCOM) and hosted by the former Soviet Republic Kazakhstan in Central Asia, 11-20 September 2000. Exercise participants include approximately 300 U. S. troops including personnel from US CENTCOM, from the US Army's 82nd Airborne Division...

S126E025026 - STS-126 - View of ISS, Docked Soyuz and Endeavour

Kazakhstan paratroopers are first into the drop zone as part of an international mass jump. Paratroopers from Kazakhstan, the United States and Turkey are descending into Kazakhstan to prepare for the the start of CENTRASBAT 2000. The Central Asian Peacekeeping Battalion exercise CENTRASBAT 2000 is a multi-national peacekeeping and humanitarian relief exercise sponsored by U.S. CENTCOM and hosted by the former the Soviet Republic Kazakhstan in Central Asia. Exercise participants include approximately 300 U.S. troops including personnel from U.S. CENTCOM, from the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and 5th Special Forces Group, Fort Campbell, Kentucky, and ...

S135E011020 - STS-135 - Flyaround View of Soyuz TMA-02M/27S Docked to MRM1

S126E024930 - STS-126 - View of ISS, Docked Soyuz and Endeavour

STS110-357-001 - STS-110 - View of the Soyuz and Atlantis' payload bay taken during STS-110's visit to the ISS

S126E024845 - STS-126 - View of Docked Soyuz, Endeavour, MSS and SRMS/OBSS

Topics

baikonur cosmodrome expedition 51 expedition 51 preflight kazakhstan pad 1 complex soyuz assembly soyuz ms 04 soyuz rocket roscosmos johnson space center expedition soyuz high resolution rocket engines rocket technology nasa