visibility Similar

The Virginia-class nuclear attack submarine Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) North Carolina under construction at Northrop Grumman Newport News shipyard.

With gentle guidance, the Canadian Space Agency’s Space Station Remote Manipulator System (SSRMS) is lowered by crane onto a test stand in the Space Station Processing Facility. At the test stand the SSRMS it will be mated to its payload carrier. This pallet will later be installed into the payload bay of Space Shuttle Endeavour for launch to the International Space Station on STS-100 in April 2001. The 56-foot-long arm will be the primary means of transferring payloads between the orbiter payload bay and the Station. Its three segments comprise seven joints for highly flexible land precise movement, making it capable of moving around the Station’s exterior like an inchworm KSC-00pp1151

SPD-SOHO-soho_photo16. NASA public domain image colelction.

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Discovery’s airlock is lowered toward the orbiter’s payload bay for installation. The airlock is sized to accommodate two fully suited flight crew members simultaneously. Support functions include airlock depressurization and repressurization, extravehicular activity equipment recharge, liquid-cooled garment water cooling, EVA equipment checkout, and communications. Discovery is designated as the Return to Flight vehicle for mission STS-114, no earlier than March 2005. STS-114 mission is Logistics Flight 1, which is scheduled to deliver supplies and equipment plus the external stowage platform to the International Space Station. KSC-04pd1135

Members of the STS-100 crew look at part of the mission payload, the Canadian robotic arm, SSRMS, which is on a workstand in the Space Station Processing Facility. Standing, from left, are Mission Specialists Yuri V. Lonchakov, Umberto Guidoni, John L. Phillips and Chris A. Hadfield. Lonchakov is with the Russian Space and Aviation Agency, Guidoni the European Space Agency, and Hadfield the Canadian Space Agency. The arm is 57.7 feet (17.6 meters) long when fully extended and has seven motorized joints. It is capable of handling large payloads and assisting with docking the Space Shuttle. The SSRMS is self-relocatable with a Latching End Effector, so it can be attached to complementary ports spread throughout the Station’s exterior surfaces. Mission STS-100 is scheduled to launch on Space Shuttle Endeavour April 19 at 2:41 p.m. EDT from Launch Pad 39A, KSC, with a crew of seven. Other crew members are Commander Kent V. Rominger, Pilot Jeffrey S. Ashby and Mission Specialist Scott E. Parazynski KSC01pp0752

Colby Cox, right, a rigger, directs the crane operator,

Anti-proton set up. Photograph taken July 13, 1959. Bevatron-1854

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. -- In the Orbiter Processing Facility bay 3, with the help of a crane, workers check the placement of a main bus switching unit in Discovery's payload bay. A main bus switching unit is used for power distribution, circuit protection and fault isolation on the space station's power system. The units route power to proper locations in the space station, such as from solar arrays through umbilicals into the U.S. Lab. The unit will be installed on the external stowage platform 2 attached to the Quest airlock for temporary storage. Discovery is targeted to launch mission STS-120 no earlier than Oct. 20. Photo credit: NASA/Jim Grossmann KSC-07pd2027

[Cherbourg Ship Launching], Marshall plan, post-war reconstruction of Europe

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WIND TURBINE BEING SHIPPED TO CLAYTON NEW MEXICO

description

Summary

The original finding aid described this as:

Capture Date: 8/18/1977

Photographer: DONALD HUEBLER

Keywords: Wind Turbine Wind Turbine Larsen Scan

Location Building No: 50

Photographs Relating to Agency Activities, Facilities and Personnel

Nothing Found.

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Tags

wind turbine wind turbine clayton new mexico nasa national aeronautics and space administration high resolution ultra high resolution wind turbine wind turbine larsen scan photographer clayton new mexico donald huebler nasa photographs space program 1970 s us national archives
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Date

1977
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Source

The U.S. National Archives
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Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
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label_outline Explore Clayton New Mexico, Wind Turbine Wind Turbine Larsen Scan, Clayton

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wind turbine wind turbine clayton new mexico nasa national aeronautics and space administration high resolution ultra high resolution wind turbine wind turbine larsen scan photographer clayton new mexico donald huebler nasa photographs space program 1970 s us national archives