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41B-20-764 - STS-41B - View of the shuttle Challenger from the fixed camera in McCandless's helmet

STS122-S-072 (20 Feb. 2008) --- Space Shuttle Atlantis approaches landing on runway 15 of the Shuttle Landing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, concluding the 13-day STS-122 mission. Onboard are NASA astronauts Steve Frick, commander; Alan Poindexter, pilot; Leland Melvin, Rex Walheim, Stanley Love, Daniel Tani, and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Hans Schlegel, all mission specialists. Main gear touchdown was 9:07:10 a.m. (EST). Nose gear touchdown was 9:07:20 a.m. Wheel stop was at 9:08:08 a.m. Mission elapsed time was 12 days, 18 hours, 21 minutes and 44 seconds. During the mission, Atlantis' crew installed the new Columbus laboratory, leaving a larger space station and one with increased science capabilities. The Columbus Research Module adds nearly 1,000 cubic feet of habitable volume and affords room for 10 experiment racks, each an independent science lab. 08pd0379

Space Shuttle Program. Experimental NASA aircraft photograph.

The NASA Super Guppy loads the Orion Space Project

A right rear view of the first B-1B bomber testbed aircraft (originally the No. 2 B-1 prototype) taking off from a runway at the Air Force Flight Test Center

Tu-144LL SST Flying Laboratory Being Towed Down Taxiway

NASA F-18 IRAC, Dryden history gallery

The Shuttle Carrier Aircraft with orbiter Columbia on top takes off from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Skid Strip. In the foreground is another SCA, which brought Atlantis back to KSC from California. The ferry flight began in California March 1. Unfavorable weather conditions kept it on the ground at Dyess AFB, Texas, until it could return to Florida. Columbia is returning from a 17-month-long modification and refurbishment process as part of a routine maintenance plan. The orbiter will next fly on mission STS-107, scheduled Oct. 25 KSC01pp0501

A 42nd Electronic Combat Squadron EF-111A Raven aircraft turns onto a taxiway during the U.S. Air Forces in Europe (USAFE) exercise Display Determination '89

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Space Shuttle Columbia, Shuttle Enterprise Free Flight

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Summary

(1977) The Space Shuttle prototype Enterprise flies free after being released from NASA's 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA) over Rogers Dry Lakebed during the second of five free flights carried out at the Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, as part of the Shuttle program's Approach and Landing Tests (ALT). The tests were conducted to verify orbiter aerodynamics and handling characteristics in preparation for orbital flights with the Space Shuttle Columbia beginning in April 1981. A tail cone over the main engine area of Enterprise smoothed out turbulent air flow during flight. It was removed on the two last free flights to accurately check approach and landing characteristics. A series of test flights during which Enterprise was taken aloft atop the SCA, but was not released, preceded the free flight tests. The Space Shuttle Approach and Landing Tests (ALT) program allowed pilots and engineers to learn how the Space Shuttle and the modified Boeing 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA) handled during low-speed flight and landing. The Enterprise, a prototype of the Space Shuttles, and the SCA were flown to conduct the approach and landing tests at the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, from February to October 1977. The first flight of the program consisted of the Space Shuttle Enterprise attached to the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft. These flights were to determine how well the two vehicles flew together. Five "captive-inactive" flights were flown during this first phase in which there was no crew in the Enterprise. The next series of captive flights was flown with a flight crew of two on board the prototype Space Shuttle. Only three such flights proved necessary. This led to the free-flight test series. The free-flight phase of the ALT program allowed pilots and engineers to learn how the Space Shuttle handled in low-speed flight and landing attitudes. For these landings, the Enterprise was flown by a crew of two after it was released from the top of the SCA. The vehicle was released at altitudes ranging from 19,000 to 26,000 feet. The Enterprise had no propulsion system, but its first four glides to the Rogers Dry Lake runway provided realistic, in-flight simulations of how subsequent Space Shuttles would be flown at the end of an orbital mission. The fifth approach and landing test, with the Enterprise landing on the Edwards Air Force Base concrete runway, revealed a problem with the Space Shuttle flight control system that made it susceptible to Pilot-Induced Oscillation (PIO), a potentially dangerous control problem during a landing. Further research using other NASA aircraft, especially the F-8 Digital-Fly-By-Wire aircraft, led to correction of the PIO problem before the first orbital flight. The Enterprise's last free-flight was October 26, 1977, after which it was ferried to other NASA centers for ground-based flight simulations that tested Space Shuttle systems and structure. ..Image # : ECN-8607

NASA Photo Collection

The Space Shuttle program was the United States government's manned launch vehicle program from 1981 to 2011, administered by NASA and officially beginning in 1972. The Space Shuttle system—composed of an orbiter launched with two reusable solid rocket boosters and a disposable external fuel tank— carried up to eight astronauts and up to 50,000 lb (23,000 kg) of payload into low Earth orbit (LEO). When its mission was complete, the orbiter would re-enter the Earth's atmosphere and lands as a glider. Although the concept had been explored since the late 1960s, the program formally commenced in 1972 and was the focus of NASA's manned operations after the final Apollo and Skylab flights in the mid-1970s. It started with the launch of the first shuttle Columbia on April 12, 1981, on STS-1. and finished with its last mission, STS-135 flown by Atlantis, in July 2011.

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space shuttle enterprise shuttle carrier aircraft sca boeing 747 dryden edwards shuttle program space shuttle flights enterprise tests space shuttle flight control system shuttle enterprise free flight space shuttle prototype enterprise space shuttle approach nasa dryden flight research center prototype space shuttle space shuttle systems space shuttle columbia dryden flight research center test flights flight tests first flight military aircraft boeing aircrafts public domain aircraft photos nasa california
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1977
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NASA

NASA Photo Collection

Space Shuttle Program

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Armstrong Flight Research Center ,  34.95855, -117.89067
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NASA
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label_outline Explore Flight Tests, Test Flights, Nasa Dryden Flight Research Center

Smoke generators show the twisting paths of wingtip vortices behind two NASA Dryden F/A-18's used in the Autonomous Formation Flight (AFF) program during flight #743. EC01-0328-17

Exact shuttle mock-up at Space Center, Houston, Texas

Military Photographer of the Year Winner 1999 TITLE: "Screaming Super Hornet" CATEGORY: Combat Camera PLACE: Honorable Mention Combat Camera CAPTION INFORMATION: Aboard USS Harry S. Truman, Naval Station Norfolk. An F/A-18E streaks across the flight deck of the TRUMAN while conducting flight tests aboard the nuclear aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75). IMAGE FILE #DD-SP-01-00006

Allied Joint Force Command Naples J-4 Movement and

Space Shuttle Atlantis, STS-45 Launch

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

Solar-powered Gossamer Penguin in flight

Vlucht met Boeing 747 naar Rome van Schiphol; lounge

A one-of-a-kind F-15 Eagle called ACTIVE (Advanced Control Technology for integrated Vehicles) in flight over the desert (viewed from above the aircraft), will start test flights in September 1994

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. -- The Space Shuttle orbiter Discovery touches down in darkness on Runway 15 of the KSC Shuttle Landing Facility, bringing to a close the 10-day STS-82 mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Main gear touchdown was at 3:32:26 a.m. EST on February 21, 1997. It was the ninth nighttime landing in the history of the Shuttle program and the 35th landing at KSC. The first landing opportunity at KSC was waved off because of low clouds in the area. The seven-member crew performed a record-tying five back-to-back extravehicular activities (EVAs) or spacewalks to service the telescope, which has been in orbit for nearly seven years. Two new scientific instruments were installed, replacing two outdated instruments. Five spacewalks also were performed on the first servicing mission, STS-61, in December 1993. Only four spacewalks were scheduled for STS-82, but a fifth one was added during the flight to install several thermal blankets over some aging insulation covering three HST compartments containing key data processing, electronics and scientific instrument telemetry packages. Crew members are Mission Commander Kenneth D. Bowersox, Pilot Scott J. "Doc" Horowitz, Payload Commander Mark C. Lee, and Mission Specialists Steven L. Smith, Gregory J. Harbaugh, Joseph R. "Joe" Tanner and Steven A. Hawley. STS-82 was the 82nd Space Shuttle flight and the second mission of 1997 KSC-97pc352

Engineers check the structure after the test flights of the Navy-built Guardian Griffin unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV).

US Air Force (USAF) SENIOR AIRMAN (SRA) Eddie F. Sutton (left), Aircraft Maintenance Technician, 723rd Air Mobility Squadron (AMS), and USAF SRA Joseph Regas, Fuels Technician, 86th Logistics Readiness Squadron (LRS), move a pentagram refueling system arm into place as they prepare to refuel a Boeing 747 commercial cargo jet on the flight line at Ramstein Air Base (AB), Germany

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space shuttle enterprise shuttle carrier aircraft sca boeing 747 dryden edwards shuttle program space shuttle flights enterprise tests space shuttle flight control system shuttle enterprise free flight space shuttle prototype enterprise space shuttle approach nasa dryden flight research center prototype space shuttle space shuttle systems space shuttle columbia dryden flight research center test flights flight tests first flight military aircraft boeing aircrafts public domain aircraft photos nasa california