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Posts Tagged ‘space shuttle’

Goodbye, Space Shuttle: Now the Space Race Can Really Begin

21 Jul

NASA’s 135th space shuttle flight ended this morning when Atlantis touched down at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, marking the close of a 30-year run for NASA’s ambitious, controversial and troubled orbital vehicle.

America’s space programs will continue, but without their flagship space plane — or any manned vehicle, for now. Over the next few years at least, U.S. astronauts will hitch rides to the International Space Station in Russian capsules. Meanwhile, purely robotic systems will take over other space duties.

Listening to some critics, you’d think America had just retreated from space, forever. “We’re basically decimating the NASA human spaceflight program,” former astronaut Jerry Ross told Reuters. “The only thing we’re going to have left in town is the station and it’s a totally different animal from the shuttle.”

Today many observers consider the Shuttle the ultimate expression of American technological prowess, and see its demise as a signal of America’s decline. In one sense, they’re right: With its huge size, distinctive shape and fiery launches, the shuttle has always been an impressive symbol. But as a practical space vehicle, it has long been an overpriced, dangerous compromise.

There’s a reason the Soviets canceled their space shuttle, and that the Chinese have never attempted one. Even without their own shuttles, both nations are now nipping at America’s heels in space. Russia has increasingly reliable rockets and capsules; China began manned spaceflights back in 2003 and is mulling a space station and a moon mission. Both countries are working hard to expand their satellite fleets, though they remain far behind the United States with its roughly 400 spacecraft.

In truth, the shuttle’s retirement could actually make the U.S. space program stronger, by finally allowing the shuttle’s two users — NASA and the Pentagon — to go their separate ways in space, each adopting space vehicles best suited to their respective missions.

“When I hear people say, or listen to media reports, that the final shuttle flight marks the end of U.S. human space flight, I have to say … these folks must be living on another planet,” NASA administrator Charlie Bolden said in a July 1 speech at the National Press Club in Washington.

For NASA, future manned missions will ride in upgraded 1960s-style manned capsules: first Russian models, then potentially American-built ones. Missions that don’t require a human passenger will fall to rockets of various sizes. The military will use many of the same rockets, and could also expand its brand-new fleet of small, robotic space planes.

Together, these vehicles will make space flight cheaper, safer and more flexible than was ever possible with the shuttle.

 
 

Space Shuttle Atlantis Launch Video: The Final Flight

08 Jul


At 11:26 ET Friday, space shuttle Atlantis flew up in the sky toward the International Space Station, marking an end of an era: It was the last aircraft to launch as part of NASA’s space shuttle program.

Atlantis will carry four astronauts during the 12-day mission, bring supplies and spare parts to the International Space Station and conduct an experiment to test new refueling and repair technology for satellites in orbit, after which it will return to Earth and retire.

SEE ALSO: Space Shuttle Launch: Photos from the Final Atlantis Flight

If you’ve missed the live stream of the launch, you can see it in the archived video below. The actual liftoff starts somewhere around 18:00 in the video.


Photos from the Final Atlantis Flight


Stay tuned. We’ll keep updating this gallery with new photos.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of NASA.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of NASA.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of NASA.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of NASA.


Solid Rocket Booster Separation




Photo courtesy of NASA.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Liftoff




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Mashable Media Badge




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


NPR Tweeted




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Official Launch M&Ms




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Elmo Reports Launch




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Media Getting Signals




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


@SethGreen Tweeted




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Tweetup Participants




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Tweetup Participants




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Tweetup Badge




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Tweetup Participants




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Tweetup Participants




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Tweetup Participants




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


@schierholz Handed Out M&Ms




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


@schierholz Tweeted




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


@schierholz's Badge




Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Shuttle Atlantis




Shuttle Atlantis moves into the Vehicle Assembly Building.

Photo courtesy of NASA.


Atlantis Sunrise




The sun rises over the launch pad at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Photo courtesy of NASA.


Atlantis Sunset




Sunset over Launch Pad 39A before the Raffaello multi-purpose logistics module (MPLM) is delivered.

Photo courtesy of NASA.


Atlantis Sunrise




Another sun rises over the Shuttle Atlantis.

Photo courtesy of NASA.


The Crew Celebrates




The STS-135 crew wave American flags in honor of Independence Day. From left: Commander Chris Ferguson, Pilot Doug Hurley, and Mission Specialists Sandy Magnus and Rex Walheim.

Photo courtesy of NASA.


The Crew Heads for Final Launch Preparation




The STS-135 team departs for the Astronaut Crew Quarters in Kennedy's Operations and Checkout Building.

Photo courtesy of NASA.


Firing Room 4




In Firing Room 4, NASA team members prepare for launch.

Photo courtesy of NASA.


Launch Pad




Atlantis was "hard down" at its seaside launch pad by 3:29 a.m. EDT on Wednesday, June 1.

Photo courtesy of NASA.


Atlantis Flag




The Atlantis flag flutters below the American flag.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Launch Pad




A view of the launch pad from across the water.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Media Gathers




News crews prepare their equipment at tents near the launch pad.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Media Tents




Two-tier media tents provide better views of the Atlantis.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Launch Clock




Ryan Matzner, lead strategist at Fueled, a mobile app development firm, stands in front of the countdown-to-launch clock.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Media Tripods




Media stakes out their turf with tripods aimed at the shuttle launch.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Tweetup




Media and spectators alike participate in the lunch Tweetup.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


En Route




The van will lead the procession of astronauts to the shuttle.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


En Route




The astronauts en route to the launch pad.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


En Route




Precious cargo on the way to the launch pad.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Vehicle Assembly Building




An impressive spectacle in itself, the Vehicle Assembly Building has been used to assemble NASA vehicles since 1968. It is the largest single-story building in the world.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


Vehicle Assembly Building




A view of the vehicle assembly building.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Matzner.


BONUS: Amazing Photographs From Endeavour’s Last Voyage


NASA recently released these breathtaking images from the last voyage of Endeavour following its return from space last month. Until October 2010, it was believed that the Endeavour mission would be the last space shuttle flight — now Atlantis is set to take that honor.


Endeavour's final voyage





Endeavour's final voyage





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Endeavour's final voyage





Endeavour's final voyage




More About: flight, NASA, space, space shuttle, Space Shuttle Atlantis, video

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In-flight iPhone snaps Space Shuttle launch

17 May

The picture at right isn't something you see every day, and it's something there'll only be one more chance to capture: a Space Shuttle launch photographed from an in-flight passenger jet. Stefanie Gordon shot this image of the Space Shuttle Endeavour's launch with her iPhone as her plane descended for a landing.

The shot itself is a rare enough event, but what happened next was an eye-opener for the photographer. According to Mashable, within a few hours of uploading the launch pics to Twitter from her iPhone, Stephanie was getting phone calls from ABC, CNBC and the BBC. Her follower count on Twitter went up by over 1000, and she was getting so many @mentions as a result of the pic that she had to shut them off so her iPhone's battery didn't get drained.

Other people on the plane took pics, but apparently none of them uploaded them to Twitter. The real draw of this story isn't that the photo was taken with an iPhone -- people use the device to take extraordinary pics all the time -- but the colossal and immediate response the photographer got after sharing it. This scenario shows just how interconnected everything has become today thanks to devices like the iPhone, and it's a trend that's only going to become more powerful as more people start sharing information this way.

In-flight iPhone snaps Space Shuttle launch originally appeared on TUAW on Tue, 17 May 2011 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NASA Considers Space Station Family Portrait

11 Feb

NASA is considering a plan to snap a photo of the International Space Station at its most crowded. The agency hasn’t made a decision yet — but maybe enough public support can convince them to take the most mind-blowing space photo of the Space Shuttle era.

During the final flight of the Space Shuttle Discovery, planned for late February or early March, the International Space Station will play host to a record number of spacecraft. Five new visitors from space agencies all over the world will be docked at the ISS, making the space station the heaviest and largest it has ever been.

This flight will the the one and only chance to capture this cosmic conference on film, before the shuttle is retired for good.

NASA officials are investigating a scheme in which one of the Russian Soyuz spacecraft would undock from the ISS to take the family portrait.

This historic photo op may require an in-flight game of musical chairs. The most reasonable plan, NASA officials decided in a meeting at Johnson Spaceflight Center, is for the Soyuz to undock, swing around the ISS so that the crew within can snap a photo, and then redock, requiring a dual-docking procedure to fit both the Soyuz and Discovery. Several different flight plans are being considered, and each one would give a slightly different view of the ISS.

The spacecraft that would gather to say cheese would hail from all over the world, including Japan’s H-II Transfer Vehicle-2, Europe’s Automated Transfer Vehicle-2 (named Johannes Kepler), the Italian-built Permanent Multipurpose Module (named Leonardo), the ExPrESS Logistics Carrier-4 and the Shuttle Discovery.

The procedure would be inconvenient, taking a total of 15 hours and possibly removing crew members from their posts at important moments. But the resulting photo would be one for the ages, and a fitting farewell to the Shuttle.

This wouldn’t be the first time a Soyuz has played photographer for a space station. In 1995, a Soyuz undocked from the Mir space station to photograph the undocking of the Space Shuttle Atlantis (above).

Image: Nikolai Budarin, Russian Space Research Institute, NASA

Via nasaspaceflight.com

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NASA Engineer Shows YouTube “Best of the Best” Shuttle Videos

11 Dec


Matt Melis, a longtime NASA engineer, has take to the ‘Tube to show off what he calls “the best of the best” imagery from shuttle launches, including high-definition video

Melis has been in the launch analysis game for quite some time. His 45-minute tribute to space shuttle launches is incredibly educational and a fascinating watch for fans of space programs.

You’ll get to hear NASA engineers explain every imaginable detail of a shuttle launch as footage from the ground and from the shuttles themselves show what goes into the first phase of a successful space mission. You’ll get to see launches for STS-114, STS-117, and STS-124 missions.

In short, if you’re really into space stuff, this YouTube video is the director’s commentary of your dreams.

“Photographic documentation of a space shuttle launch plays a critical role in the engineering analysis and evaluation process that takes place during each and every mission,” Melis writes on the YouTube video page.

“Motion and still images enable shuttle engineers to visually identify off-nominal events and conditions requiring corrective action to ensure mission safety and success… Rendered in the highest definition possible, this production is a tribute to the dozens of men and women of the shuttle imaging team and the 30 years of achievement of the Space Shuttle Program.”

Melis has been at the Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, for many years. He was part of the ballistics team that analyzed the Columbia launch accident, for example.

Here’s the full video. Let us know what you think in the comments.


Reviews: YouTube

More About: NASA, Science, shuttle launch, space, space shuttle, trending, youtube

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Last Space Shuttle flight scheduled for February, 2011

01 Jul

The very last Space Shuttle flight will take place on February 26, 2011. After that, American astronauts will have to bum rides with the Russians if they want to visit the International Space Station. Shame.

There’s two more missions aboard the Space Shuttle. There’s one on November 1, 2010 (Space Shuttle Discovery, STS-133) and the aforementioned February, 2011 one (Space Shuttle Endeavour, STS-134).

Apparently Space Shuttle Atlantis may get one more flight, but Nasa will wait until next month before it decides one way or the other.

Both flights will bring various pieces of equipment to the ISS, chief among them the ALPHA MAGNETIC SPECTROMETER~! which is a type of cosmic ray detector that Nasa hopes will be used to better understand the formation and structure of the universe.

And yup, after this we’ll have no way of getting to the ISS without having to pay the Russians for a seat on one of their spacecraft—slightly embarrassing for a country as wealthy as the U.S. to not have an active space program, yes.