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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – From left, Kennedy Space Center Director Bob Cabana, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden, Tina Palacio and Bolden's aide Kirk Sander leave the Vehicle Assembly Building after viewing the Ares I-X operations. Behind Palacios is Acting Associate Administrator of Exploration Systems Doug Cook, and at far right is Chief of Staff in the Office of the Administrator George Whitesides. Bolden is touring several facilities at Kennedy involved with NASA's Constellation Program. Bolden also was at Kennedy for several events, including the landing of space shuttle Endeavour's STS-127 mission and the signing of the joint NASA-Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency agreement defining the terms of cooperation between the agencies on the Global Precipitation Measurement, or GPM, mission. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett KSC-2009-4370

An Air Force Titan IV/Centaur Launch Vehicle sits poised on Complex 41 ready to carry a classified Department of Defense Payload into orbit

S130E006685 - STS-130 - Columbus during STS-130 Approach

At Chkalovsky Airbase outside Star City, Russia, Expedition 24 Commander Alexander Skvortsov (foreground) and Flight Engineer Mikhail Kornienko (arms raised) descend from the plane that flew them from Karaganda, Kazakhstan back to their training base at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center September 25, 2010, just hours after returning to Earth in the Soyuz TMA-18 spacecraft to wrap up 176 days in space, 174 days on the International Space Station. Their crewmate, Tracy Caldwell Dyson, who landed with them, flew home on a NASA plane to the Johnson Space Center. Credit: NASA/Jeremiah Maddix jsc2010e167392

SAN DIEGO, Calif. -- The Orion crew module is being moved by crane from its crew module recovery cradle and will be placed in the crew module transportation fixture at the Mole Pier at Naval Base San Diego in California. The fixture has been secured on the back of a flatbed truck. Orion is being prepared for the overland trip back to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Orion was recovered from the Pacific Ocean after completing a two-orbit, four-and-a-half hour mission Dec. 5 to test systems critical to crew safety, including the launch abort system, the heat shield and the parachute system. NASA, the U.S. Navy and Lockheed Martin coordinated efforts to recover Orion. The Ground Systems Development and Operations Program led the recovery, offload and pre-transportation efforts. For more information, visit www.nasa.gov/orion Photo credit: NASA/Cory Huston KSC-2014-4811

STS106-347-012 - STS-106 - Zenith side of Zvezda & Progress taken from Atlantis during STS-106

STS-132 - LAUNCH - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

STS-131 - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

US COAST GUARD Sikorsky dedication

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STS-132 - EOM - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

description

Summary

Description: CONVOY COVERAGE OF ORBITER ROLLOUT, CREW EGRESS, AND POST-LANDING

Item: DL031-EOM

Date Taken: 5/26/2010

Image Type: DIGITAL STILLS

STS132 LAUNCH AND LANDING

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Tags

eom sts 132 atlantis nasa launch and landing high resolution ultra high resolution digital stills sts 132 convoy coverage orbiter rollout crew egress astronauts space station space program
date_range

Date

25/07/2005 - 21/07/2011
create

Source

The U.S. National Archives
link

Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
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Copyright info

No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Convoy Coverage, Orbiter Rollout, Crew Egress

Topics

eom sts 132 atlantis nasa launch and landing high resolution ultra high resolution digital stills sts 132 convoy coverage orbiter rollout crew egress astronauts space station space program