visibility Similar

STS101-321-016 - STS-101 - Docked view of the PMA-2 and Node 1/Unity modules

STS-133 Discovery GUCP Re-Installation 2010-5692

STS094-341-008 - STS-094 - CM-1 - Voss performs OPS

On a workstand in the Space Station Processing Facility, workers stand by while an overhead crane is ready to lift the Multi-Purpose Logistics Module Leonardo to move it to the weight and balance scale. The Italian-built MPLM is one of three such pressurized modules that will serve as the International Space Station's "moving vans," carrying laboratory racks filled with equipment, experiments and supplies to and from the station aboard the Space Shuttle. The cylindrical module is approximately 21 feet long and 15 feet in diameter, weighing almost 4.1 metric tons. It can carry up to 9.1 metric tons of cargo packed into 16 standard space station equipment racks. The Leonardo will be launched on mission STS-102 March 8. On that flight, Leonardo will be filled with equipment and supplies to outfit the U.S. laboratory module, to be carried to the ISS on the Feb. 7 launch of STS-98 KSC-01pp0250

STS-134 AMS PAYLOAD MOVE 2010-4499

2014-09-18-12-46-56 At the Integration Facility at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, the Soyuz TMA-14M spacecraft awaits its encapsulation in the upper stage of the Soyuz booster rocket Sept. 18 that will propel it into orbit. The Soyuz will arrive at its launch pad on Sept. 23 for final pre-launch preparations. Expedition 41/42 Flight Engineer Barry Wilmore of NASA, Soyuz Commander Alexander Samokutyaev of the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) and Flight Engineer Elena Serova of Roscosmos will launch aboard the Soyuz Sept. 26, Kazakh time, to begin a 5 ½ month mission on the International Space Station. Serova will become the fourth Russian woman to fly in space and the first Russian woman to live and work on the station. NASA/Victor Zelentsov jsc2014e081143

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- On Launch Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, preparations are under way to reattach the vent line to the ground umbilical carrier plate (GUCP) on space shuttle Discovery's external fuel tank. A hydrogen gas leak at that location during tanking for Discovery's STS-133 mission to the International Space Station caused the launch attempt to be scrubbed Nov. 5. The GUCP is the overboard vent to the pad and the flame stack where the excess hydrogen is burned off. Discovery's next launch attempt is no earlier than Nov. 30 at 4:02 a.m. EST. For more information on STS-133, visit www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/shuttlemissions/sts133/. Photo credit: NASA/Ben Smegelsky KSC-2010-5692

STS060-301-016 - STS-060 - SEF - Davis films crystal formation in furnace

STS095-334-009 - STS-095 - BRIC canister attached to middeck locker

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THEMIS SPACECRAFT - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

description

Summary

The original finding aid described this as:

Description: NASA's Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS) SPACECRAFT LOCATED IN THE SWALES AEROSPACE CLEANROOM..

Photographer: CHRIS GUNN

Date: 1/30/2006

Job Number: 2006-00591-0

Preservation Copy: .tif

2006

Nothing Found.

label_outline

Tags

themis spacecraft nasa high resolution themis spacecraft swales aerospace cleanroom macroscale interactions chris gunn job number preservation copy space program
date_range

Date

2006 - 2011
create

Source

The U.S. National Archives
link

Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Swales Aerospace Cleanroom, Macroscale Interactions, Themis Spacecraft

Topics

themis spacecraft nasa high resolution themis spacecraft swales aerospace cleanroom macroscale interactions chris gunn job number preservation copy space program