Saturday, 31 July 2010

STS-133 Mission T-shirt

STS-133 mission T-shirt - Grab one today at the Spaceboosters Online Store!



Launch Target:


4:40 p.m. EDT - Nov. 1, 2010

Orbiter: Discovery

Mission Number: STS-133 (133rd space shuttle flight)

Launch Window:  10 minutes

Launch Pad: 39A

Mission Duration: 11 days

Landing Site: KSC

Inclination/Altitude: 51.6 degrees/122 nautical miles

Primary Payload: 35th station flight (ULF5), EXPRESS Logistics Carrier 4 (ELC4), Permanent Multi-Purpose Module (PMM)

Space Mission T's Available from the SPACEBOOSTERS Online Store

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

Wild 2: If You Were There

Wild 2: If You Were There

On Jan. 2, 2004 NASA's Stardust spacecraft made a close flyby of comet Wild 2 (pronounced "Vilt-2"). Among the equipment the spacecraft carried on board was a navigation camera.that Comet Wild 2 is about 3.1 miles in diameter.





This artist's concept depicts a view of Wild 2 that shows the faint jets emanating from the comet.



Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Monday, 26 July 2010

STS-132 Astronauts in the Oval Office

Astronauts in the Oval Office

President Barack Obama greets the STS-132 Atlantis crew and International Space Station astronaut T.J. Creamer in the Oval Office, July 26, 2010.

From left, STS-132 Commander Ken Ham; Expedition 22/23 Flight Engineer T.J. Creamer; STS-132 Mission Specialists Piers Sellers, Garret Reisman, and Steve Bowen; President Obama; STS-132 Mission Specialist Michael Good; and STS-132 Pilot Tony Antonelli.

Official White House Photo by Pete Souza




NASA Simulates Space Exploration At Remote Arctic Crater Site

NASA Simulates Space Exploration At Remote Arctic Crater Site

WASHINGTON -- NASA personnel are among a group of international researchers who are in the Canadian Arctic assessing concepts for future planetary exploration as part of the Haughton-Mars Project, or HMP-2010.

Scientists are using the arid, rocky environment of the Haughton Crater on Devon Island, Canada to simulate conditions that might be encountered by explorers on other planetary bodies. The latest edition of the HMP-2010 began July 19 and includes three weeks of crew and mission control activities and robotic testing.

"Explorers, such as geologists, often find themselves with a set of observations they would have liked to make, or samples they would have liked to take, if only they had been able to stay longer at a site," said Terry Fong, director of the Intelligent Robotics Group at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. "Our work this year is to study how remotely -operated robots, perhaps even vehicles previously used for crew transport, can be used to perform follow-up work."



Using robots for such follow-up work could save astronauts from performing tedious, repetitive or time-consuming activities. Surveying a site could take hundreds to thousands of readings using ground-penetrating radar, spectrometers, or geotechnical instruments. Additionally, robots could make measurements and take pictures that complement or supplement those initially taken by humans.



Mission planners speculate that in the future, there could be substantial amounts of time between crewed missions for robots to perform research work at a range of destinations.



During HMP-2010, NASA will deploy robots developed by the Intelligent Robotics Group at Ames. The robots, known as K10s, are equipped with a variety of instruments including 3-D scanning lidar, color imagers, spectrometers and ground-penetrating radar. The K10s will map systematically above and below ground structures and characterize rocks, soil and landscape of key areas at Haughton Crater.

NASA also will conduct a series of experiments designed to examine how future surface systems, such as crew rovers, might be repositioned robotically from one location to a new rendezvous location with astronauts.

"Poor lighting and low resolution of satellite imagery can make a planned route look very simple from above," said Matt Leonard, deputy manager of the Lunar Surface Systems Project (LSS) at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. "But once we are on the ground, we can see obstacles we couldn't before that make the route unexpectedly challenging. We will study how to use ground robots to scout alternative safe routes, categorize hard-to-detect obstacles and examine how best to prepare for venturing into unknown terrain."

In addition to working around unexpected roadblocks during future planetary convoys, the LSS experiment team will study how a robot on a set route with a fixed schedule can conduct science tasks, such as taking samples or gathering images. The team will work with a K10 robot and HMP's MARS-1 Humvee Rover field exploration vehicle to simulate a large planetary crew rover equipped with science instruments.

The activities in Canada support both the Moon and Mars Analog Mission Activities Program in the Science Mission Directorate and the Exploration Technology Development Program in the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

The Haughton-Mars Project is an international, multidisciplinary field research project focused on the scientific study of the crater and surrounding terrain on Devon Island. The site's polar desert setting, geological features and microbiology make the crater a good site for moon and Mars analog studies. HMP-2010 is managed by the Mars Institute in Moffett Field, Calif., in collaboration with the SETI Institute in Mountain View, Calif.

For information about NASA's Exploration Analog Missions and the Haughton Mars Project, visit:

Main Engine Heat Shields Installation Today

Technicians are installing the main engine heat shields today as they continue to ready space shuttle Discovery for its targeted Nov. 1 launch on the STS-133 mission to the International Space Station. Discovery is in its processing hangar at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida for the preparations.

The astronauts who will fly the mission return today from summer vacation and will conduct emergency systems and robotics training at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston.


Attired in training versions of their shuttle launch and entry suits, these six astronauts take a break from training to pose for the STS-133 crew portrait. Pictured are NASA astronauts Steve Lindsey (center right) and Eric Boe (center left), commander and pilot, respectively; along with astronauts (from the left) Alvin Drew, Nicole Stott, Michael Barratt and Tim Kopra, all mission specialists. Photo credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Dreamy, Young Stars in the Orion Nebula

The Orion Nebula is a 'happening' place where stars are born and this colony of hot, young stars is stirring up the cosmic scene in this image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. The young stars dip and peak in brightness; shifting cold and hot spots on the stars' surfaces cause brightness levels to change. In addition, surrounding disks of lumpy planet-forming material can obstruct starlight. Spitzer is keeping tabs on the young stars, providing data on their changing ways. The hottest stars in the region are the Trapezium cluster. This image was taken after Spitzer's liquid coolant ran dry in May 2009, marking the beginning of its "warm" mission. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech.



Sunday, 25 July 2010

Discovery Preps Continue Through the Weekend

The fuel and oxidizer feed connections on space shuttle Discovery's right Orbital Maneuvering System, or OMS, pod were completed overnight in Orbiter Processing Facility-3 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.




Technicians are scheduled to conduct integrated hydraulic testing today and during the weekend work on Discovery's thermal protection system, or heat shield tiles.


The six STS-133 astronauts will resume training on Monday at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston after returning from their week of summer vacation.
 
 
The crew includes:
 
Steve Lindsey and Eric Boe , commander and pilot, respectively;
Alvin Drew, Nicole Stott, Michael Barratt and Tim Kopra, all mission specialists.

NASA Astronaut Sends First Signed Message from Orbit

NASA Astronaut Sends First Signed Message from Orbit

WASHINGTON -- The number of languages used on the International Space Station has recently increased. In addition to those spoken in the 15 countries that have had representatives aboard the space station, American Sign Language, or ASL, is now included. NASA astronaut Tracy Caldwell Dyson has sent a message in ASL from the station to the deaf community.

In the video, Caldwell Dyson answered several questions about living and working aboard the station and how she became interested in sign language.

"I am truly grateful for this opportunity on behalf of the deaf community and the multitudes of students who will benefit from seeing their language spoken in space," Caldwell Dyson said. "It is my hope that this video will help inspire our next generation of scientists and explorers."



As NASA's missions advance beyond Earth's orbit, the agency will continue its efforts to highlight its diverse workforce. NASA strives to assist the next generation of researchers to gain access to science-related fields.



Caldwell Dyson will work on several other videos targeted to users of ASL. When the videos are completed, they will be posted on the agency's website at:




To view Caldwell Dyson's message and learn more about the space station, visit:




To view Caldwell Dyson's bio, visit:





NASA'S Hubble Shows Hyperfast Star

NASA'S Hubble Shows Hyperfast Star Was Booted From Milky Way

WASHINGTON -- NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has detected a hypervelocity star, a rare phenomenon moving three times faster than our sun.

The star may have been created in a cosmic misstep. A hundred million years ago, a triple-star system was traveling through the bustling center of our Milky Way galaxy when it wandered too close to the galaxy's giant black hole. The black hole captured one of the stars and hurled the other two out of the Milky Way. The two outbound stars merged to form a super-hot blue star traveling at incredible speeds.

This story may seem like science fiction, but Hubble astronomers say it is the most likely scenario for the creation of a so-called hypervelocity star, known as HE 0437-5439. It is one of the fastest ever detected with a speed of 1.6 million mph. Hubble observations confirm that the stellar speedster hails from the Milky Way's core, settling some confusion about the star's original home.

Most of the roughly 16 known hypervelocity stars, all discovered since 2005, are thought to be exiles from the heart of our galaxy. But this Hubble result is the first direct observation linking such a star to an origin in the center of the galaxy.

"Using Hubble, we can for the first time trace back to where the star came from by measuring the star's direction of motion on the sky," said astronomer Warren Brown of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass. "Our measurements point directly to the Milky Way center."

Brown, a member of the Hubble team that observed the star, is the lead author on a paper about the finding published online July 20 in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Brown said, "These exiled stars are rare in the Milky Way's population of 100 billion stars. For every 100 million stars in the galaxy, there lurks one hypervelocity star."

The stellar outcast already is cruising in the Milky Way's distant outskirts about 200,000 light-years from the galaxy's center. Using Hubble to measure the runaway star's direction and determine the Milky Way's core as its starting point, Brown and Gnedin's team calculated how fast the star had to have been ejected to reach its current location.

"Studying these stars could provide more clues about the nature of some of the universe's unseen mass, and it could help astronomers better understand how galaxies form," said team leader Oleg Gnedin of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

The star's age is another mystery. Based on the speed and position of HE 0437-5439, the star would have to be 100 million years old to have journeyed from the Milky Way's core. Yet its mass -- nine times that of our sun-- and blue color mean that it should have burned out after only 20 million years -- far shorter than the transit time it took to get to its current location.

Astronomers have proposed two possibilities to solve the age problem. The star either dipped into the Fountain of Youth by becoming a blue straggler, or it was flung out of the Large Magellanic Cloud, a neighboring galaxy.

In 2008 a team of astronomers thought they had solved the mystery. They found a match between the exiled star's chemical makeup and the characteristics of stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The rogue star's position also is close to the neighboring galaxy, only 65,000 light-years away. The new Hubble result, however, settles the debate over the star's birthplace and places it in the Milky Way.

The most likely explanation for the star's blue color and extreme speed is that it was part of a triple-star system that was involved in a gravitational billiards game with the galaxy's monster black hole. This concept for imparting an escape velocity on stars was first proposed in 1988. The theory predicted the Milky Way's black hole should eject a star about once every 100,000 years.

The triple-star system contained a pair of closely orbiting stars and a third outer member also gravitationally tied to the group. The black hole pulled the outer star away from the tight binary system. The doomed star's momentum was transferred to the stellar twosome, boosting the duo to escape velocity from the galaxy. As the pair rocketed away, they went on with normal stellar evolution.

The more massive companion evolved more quickly, puffing up to become a red giant. It enveloped its partner, and the two stars spiraled together, merging into one superstar, the blue straggler that Hubble observed. A blue straggler is a relatively young, massive star produced by the merger of two lighter-weight stars.

Astronomers used the sharp vision of Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys to make two separate observations of the wayward star 3.5 years apart. Team member Jay Anderson of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore developed a technique to measure the star's position relative to each of 11 distant background galaxies. These background galaxies form a reference frame in which Anderson compared the star's position in 2006 and 2009 to calculate how far it had moved.

"Hubble excels with this type of measurement," Anderson said. "This observation would be challenging to do from the ground."

The team is trying to determine the homes of four other unbound stars, all located on the fringes of the Milky Way.

"We are targeting massive "B" stars, like HE 0437-5439," said Brown, who has discovered 14 of the 16 known hypervelocity stars. "These stars shouldn't live long enough to live in the distant outskirts of the Milky Way, so we shouldn't expect to find them there. But the quantity of stars in the outer region is much less than in the core, so we have a better chance of finding these unusual objects."

For graphics and more information about HE 0437-5439, visit:


Most Accurate Mars Map Ever

NASA Spacecraft Camera Yields Most Accurate Mars Map Ever

WASHINGTON -- A camera aboard NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft has helped develop the most accurate global Martian map ever. Researchers and the public can access the map via several websites and explore and survey the entire surface of the Red Planet.

The map was constructed using nearly 21,000 images from the Thermal Emission Imaging System, or THEMIS, a multi-band infrared camera on Odyssey. Researchers at Arizona State University's Mars Space Flight Facility in Tempe, in collaboration with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., have been compiling the map since THEMIS observations began eight years ago.

The pictures have been smoothed, matched, blended and cartographically controlled to make a giant mosaic. Users can pan around images and zoom into them. At full zoom, the smallest surface details are 330 feet wide. While portions of Mars have been mapped at higher resolution, this map provides the most accurate view so far of the entire planet.

The new map is available at:


Advanced users with large bandwidth, powerful computers and software capable of handling images in the gigabyte range can download the full-resolution map in sections at:


"We've tied the images to the cartographic control grid provided by the U.S. Geological Survey, which also modeled the THEMIS camera's optics," said Philip Christensen, principal investigator for THEMIS and director of the Mars Space Flight Facility. "This approach lets us remove all instrument distortion, so features on the ground are correctly located to within a few pixels and provide the best global map of Mars to date."

Working with THEMIS images from the new map, the public can contribute to Mars exploration by aligning the images to within a pixel's accuracy at NASA's "Be A Martian" website, which was developed in cooperation with Microsoft Corp. Users can visit the site at:


Thursday, 15 July 2010

NASA Supporting Gulf Oil Spill Wildlife Recovery

NASA Supporting Gulf Oil Spill Wildlife Recovery

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- NASA’s Kennedy Space Center is helping with the unprecedented effort to save wildlife from the effects of the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

The first group of hatchlings from endangered sea turtle eggs brought from beaches along the northern U.S. Gulf Coast was released into the Atlantic Ocean off Kennedy’s central Florida coast on July 11. Twenty-two Kemp’s ridley turtles were set free on a Kennedy Space Center beach, which is part of the Canaveral National Seashore.

After being collected on June 26, the Kemp’s ridley nest from Walton County, Fla., was packed in a Styrofoam box with sand and transported by a specially-equipped FexEx truck to a secure, climate-controlled facility at Kennedy where it was monitored until incubation was complete. Most of the nests that will be collected are from loggerhead turtles, but nests from leatherback and green turtles, in addition to Kemp’s ridley, may be brought to the Kennedy hatchery.

Video of the hatchery at Kennedy, the nest and release of the first group of hatchlings is airing on NASA Television’s Video File segment. For NASA TV downlink information, schedules and links to streaming video, visit:

Still images are available at:

In an effort to have a minimal impact on the initial incubating eggs and hatchling releases, there are no opportunities currently planned for news media to visit the Kennedy hatchery or view a turtle release. However, as the ocean release process is refined, it is expected media opportunities will be scheduled. Media who want to be added to a notification list for opportunities should contact Pat Behnke at the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

The release and relocation work is part of an environmental endeavor by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the National Park Service, NOAA, FedEx and conservationists to help minimize the risk to this year’s sea turtle hatchlings from impacts of the oil spill. During the next several months, this plan involves carefully moving an anticipated 700 nests to Kennedy that have been laid on Florida Panhandle and Alabama beaches.

The Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1963 as an overlay of Kennedy Space Center, where it shares the land with space shuttle launch pads, rockets and research and development facilities. As part of the Deepwater Horizon Response, six brown pelicans, four laughing gulls and one common tern also were released at Kennedy on June 6.

The complete turtle relocation plan, along with other wildlife related plans and recommended wildlife protocols, is available at:

For information about the Deepwater Horizon Response, visit:

For more information about the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s oil spill response, visit:

For information about NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, visit:




Launch Countdown Sim Today

The launch team at NASA's Kennedy Space Center will simulate a shuttle countdown today as preparations continue for the STS-133 mission, targeted to launch Nov. 1. While the countdown practice moves ahead, technicians processing space shuttle Discovery for the mission are continuing their work on the main engine heat shields and will install the right-side pod of the Orbital Maneuvering System.

At NASA's Johnson Space Center, the STS-133 astronauts are practicing rendezvous techniques today.

NASA Sets Briefing to Preview Space Station Spacewalk

NASA Sets Briefing to Preview Space Station Spacewalk

HOUSTON -- NASA officials will discuss an upcoming International Space Station spacewalk by two Russian cosmonauts during a news briefing at 2 p.m. CDT on Wednesday, July 21.

The briefing will take place at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston and be broadcast live on NASA Television and the agency's website. Questions will be taken from journalists at participating NASA locations.

The briefers are:

- Dan Hartman, Integration and Mission Operations manager, International Space Station Program

- Chris Edelen, Expedition 24 spacewalk flight director

On Monday, July 26, Expedition 24 Flight Engineers Fyodor Yurchikhin and Mikhail Kornienko will wear Russian spacesuits for a six-hour spacewalk. They will prepare the recently delivered Russian Rassvet Module for future automated dockings by Russian spacecraft. NASA TV coverage of the spacewalk will begin at 10 p.m. Yurchikhin and Kornienko are expected to exit the Pirs airlock to begin their work at 10:45 p.m. It will be Yurchikhin's third spacewalk and the first for Kornienko.

For NASA TV streaming video, schedules and downlink information, visit:


For more information about the station and the Expedition 24 crew, visit:



In the Constellation Cassiopeia

In the Constellation Cassiopeia

Tycho's Supernova, the red circle visible in the upper left part of the image, is SN 1572 is a remnant of a star explosion is named after the astronomer Tycho Brahe, although he was not the only person to observe and record the supernova. When the supernova first appeared in November 1572, it was as bright as Venus and could be seen in the daytime. Over the next two years, the supernova dimmed until it could no longer be seen with the naked eye. In the 1950s, the remnants of the supernova could be seen again with the help of telescopes.

When the star exploded, it sent out a blast wave into the surrounding material, scooping up interstellar dust and gas as it went, like a snow plow. An expanding shock wave traveled into the surroundings and a reverse shock was driven back in toward the remnants of the star. Previous observations by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope indicate that the nature of the light that WISE sees from the supernova remnant is emission from dust heated by the shock wave.

To the right is a star-forming nebula of dust and gas, called S175. This cloud of material is about 3,500 light-years away and 35 light-years across. It is heated by radiation from the young, hot stars within it, and the dust within the cloud radiates infrared light.



Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA

Friday, 9 July 2010

First NASA Astronaut To Send Live Tweet From Space Hosts Tweetup

First NASA Astronaut To Send Live Tweet From Space Hosts Tweetup

 WASHINGTON -- NASA invites its Twitter followers to a special Tweetup with astronaut T.J. Creamer at 3 p.m. EDT on Thursday, July 29. The event will take place in the James E. Webb Memorial Auditorium at NASA Headquarters, 300 E St. SW, Washington.

While in space, Creamer set up the International Space Station's live Internet connection. He posted updates about the mission to his Twitter account and sent the first live tweet from the orbiting outpost.

A Tweetup is an informal meeting of people who use the social messaging medium Twitter. This NASA Tweetup is an opportunity to meet and speak with Creamer, the people behind NASA's Twitter account, and other space-exploration-minded participants.

Registration for the event is open from noon EDT, Friday, July 9 until 5 p.m. on Tuesday, July 13. NASA randomly will select 100 participants from web registrants. Additional applicants will be placed on a waiting list. For more NASA Tweetup information and to sign up, visit:


Creamer spent 161 days living aboard the station as part of the Expedition 22 and 23 crews. He launched aboard a Soyuz spacecraft in December 2009 and returned to Earth June 2, 2010. Creamer's Twitter account is:


For Creamer's complete biography, visit:


To find and follow NASA programs on Twitter, visit:

Standing on the Chukchi Sea

Scientists on the sea ice in the Chukchi Sea off the north coast of Alaska disperse equipment on July 4, 2010, as they prepare to collect data on and below the ice. The research is part of NASA's ICESCAPE mission aboard the U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker Healy to sample the physical, chemical and biological characteristics of the ocean and sea ice. Impacts of Climate change on the Eco-Systems and Chemistry of the Arctic Pacific Environment (ICESCAPE) is a multi-year NASA shipborne project. The bulk of the research will take place in the Beaufort and Chukchi Sea’s in the summer of 2010 and fall of 2011. Image Credit: NASA/Kathryn Hansen


Processing Work, CEIT Training for STS-133

Fri, 09 Jul 2010 08:41:44 -0500

Technicians at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida are to install the main landing gear wheel and tire assembly Friday on space shuttle Discovery as launch processing moves along for the STS-133 mission, targeted to launch Nov. 1. The processing team is also installing the heat shields for the main engines, a step which will wrap up next week.

The six astronauts who will fly Discovery to the International Space Station are training at Kennedy through Saturday with the actual flight hardware they will use on the mission. The training is called the CEIT, for Crew Equipment Interface Test.

Thursday, 8 July 2010

NASA And Partners Assign Crews For Upcoming Space Station Missions

NASA And Partners Assign Crews For Upcoming Space Station Missions

WASHINGTON -- NASA and its international partners, the Russia Federal Space Agency and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), have assigned four new International Space Station crews.

The crews include NASA astronauts Joe Acaba, Sunita Williams and Kevin Ford. Acaba was born in Inglewood, Calif., and raised in Anaheim, Calif. Williams was born in Euclid, Ohio, but considers Needham, Mass., her hometown. Ford was born in Portland, Ind., and considers Montpelier, Ind., his hometown.

Russian cosmonaut Oleg Konenenko, European Space Agency astronaut Andre Kuipers and NASA astronaut Don Pettit were previously announced as Expedition 31 crew members. Expedition 31 begins when Soyuz 28 undocks from the station in March 2012.

Soyuz 30 is set to launch in April 2012 with the following crew members who have been added to Expedition 31:

-- NASA astronaut Joe Acaba, flight engineer

-- Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, flight engineer

-- Russian cosmonaut Konstantin Valkov, flight engineer (Soyuz 30)



Expedition 32 will begin with the undocking of Soyuz 29 in May 2012. Soyuz 31 is set to launch in June 2012 with the crew members listed below who will join the three station residents already aboard.

-- Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, station commander (Soyuz 30)

-- NASA astronaut Joe Acaba, flight engineer (Soyuz 30)

-- Russian cosmonaut Konstantin Valkov, flight engineer (Soyuz 30)

-- NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, flight engineer (Soyuz 31)

-- Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko, flight engineer (Soyuz 31)

-- JAXA astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, flight engineer (Soyuz 31)



Expedition 33 will begin with the undocking of Soyuz 30 in September 2012. Soyuz 32 is set to launch in October 2012 with the crew members listed below who will join the three station residents already aboard.

-- NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, station commander

-- Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko, flight engineer

-- JAXA astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, flight engineer

-- NASA astronaut Kevin Ford, flight engineer (Soyuz 32)

-- Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy, flight engineer (Soyuz 32)

-- Russian cosmonaut Evgeny Tarelkin, flight engineer (Soyuz 32)



Expedition 34 will begin with the undocking of Soyuz 31 in November 2012.

-- NASA astronaut Kevin Ford, station commander (Soyuz 32)

-- Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy, flight engineer (Soyuz 32)

-- Russian cosmonaut Evgeny Tarelkin, flight engineer (Soyuz 32)



Three additional crew members for Expedition 34 have yet to be assigned. They will travel to and from the station aboard Soyuz 33.

For more information about the space station, visit:


For the announcement of the Expedition 27-31 crew members, visit:

Discovery Preps Ongoing; Crew at Kennedy for CEIT

Thu, 08 Jul 2010 08:52:30 -0500

At NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, technicians continue the installation of space shuttle Discovery's main engine heat shields. They also will work on installing the spacecraft's main landing gear brakes.

Meanwhile, preparations are in process for the Crew Interface Equipment Test, or CEIT, scheduled to begin tomorrow. Held at Kennedy prior to launch, CEIT gives astronauts the opportunity for hands-on training with the actual tools, equipment and hardware they'll use in orbit.

The STS-133 astronauts are flying to Kennedy today in their T-38 training aircraft for CEIT. They also will be reviewing the systems and proposed cargo for the Leonardo Permanent Multipurpose Module, or PMM, that will be delivered to the International Space Station during the mission.‪

Smoother Landings

Smoother Landings

Spacecraft attempting to land on an unfamiliar surface need to perform a maneuver called “deep throttling" -- a step that allows the vehicle to precisely throttle down to perform a smooth, controlled landing. NASA and industry partners have demonstrated this type of engine control capability to help design a more reliable and robust descent engine that could be used to land space exploration vehicles on the moon, an asteroid or another planet. The Common Extensible Cryogenic Engine, also known as CECE, recently completed the fourth and final series of hot-fire tests on a 15,000-pound thrust class cryogenic technology demonstrator rocket engine, increasing the throttling capability by 35 percent over previous tests. This test series demonstrated this engine could go from a thrust range of 104 percent power down to 5.9 percent. This equates to an unprecedented 17.6:1 deep-throttling capability, which means this cryogenic engine can quickly throttle up and down.




Image Credit: NASA

Engine Heat Shields in Work Today

With space shuttle Discovery's three main engines installed, technicians at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida today are preparing to place the engine heat shields. The shields will be installed starting Thursday.



The crew of STS-133, targeted for launch Nov. 1, are working on spacewalking procedures at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston as they continue training for the mission to the International Space Station.

Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity

A Place in History



NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity used its navigation camera to take the images combined into this full 360-degree view of the rover's surroundings after a drive on the 2,220th Martian day, or sol, of its mission (April 22, 2010).

Opportunity launched on July 7, 2003, on a mission slated to last 90 days, landing on Mars in January 2004. The rover has exceeded its mission parameters by more than 2,200 days as its exploration of the Red Planet continues.


Opportunity took some of the component images for this mosaic on Sol 2220, after the drive, and the rest on Sol 2221. Wind-formed ripples of dark sand make up much of the terrain surrounding this position. Patches of outcrop are visible to the south. For scale, the distance between the parallel wheel tracks is about 1 meter (about 40 inches).



Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Tuesday, 6 July 2010

Celestial Fireworks

Celestial Fireworks

Like an Independence Day fireworks display, a young, glittering collection of stars looks like an aerial burst. The cluster is surrounded by clouds of interstellar gas and dust -- the raw material for new star formation. The nebula, located 20,000 light-years away in the constellation Carina, contains a central cluster of huge, hot stars, called NGC 3603.

This environment is not as peaceful as it looks. Ultraviolet radiation and violent stellar winds have blown out an enormous cavity in the gas and dust enveloping the cluster, providing an unobstructed view of the cluster.

Most of the stars in the cluster were born around the same time but differ in size, mass, temperature, and color. The course of a star's life is determined by its mass, so a cluster of a given age will contain stars in various stages of their lives, giving an opportunity for detailed analyses of stellar life cycles. NGC 3603 also contains some of the most massive stars known. These huge stars live fast and die young, burning through their hydrogen fuel quickly and ultimately ending their lives in supernova explosions.

Star clusters like NGC 3603 provide important clues to understanding the origin of massive star formation in the early, distant universe. Astronomers also use massive clusters to study distant starbursts that occur when galaxies collide, igniting a flurry of star formation. The proximity of NGC 3603 makes it an excellent lab for studying such distant and momentous events.



Image Credit: NASA, ESA, R. O'Connell (University of Virginia), F. Paresce (National Institute for Astrophysics, Bologna, Italy), E. Young (Universities Space Research Association/Ames Research Center), the WFC3 Science Oversight Committee, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)

Icy Triton

Taken in 1989 by Voyager 2 during its flyby of the Neptune system, this is a global color mosaic of Triton. The color was synthesized by combining high-resolution images taken through orange, violet and ultraviolet filters; these images were displayed as red, green, and blue images and combined to create this color version. With a radius about 22 percent smaller than Earth's moon, Triton is the largest satellite of Neptune and is one of the few bodies in the solar system known to have a nitrogen-dominated atmosphere. The others are Earth and Saturn's giant moon, Titan.



Image Credit: NASA/JPL/USGS

Triton is so cold that most of its nitrogen is condensed as frost, making it the only satellite in the solar system known to have a surface made mainly of nitrogen ice. The pinkish deposits constitute a vast south polar cap believed to contain methane ice, which would have reacted under sunlight to form pink or red compounds. The dark streaks overlying these pink ices are believed to be an icy and perhaps carbonaceous dust deposited from huge geyser-like plumes, some of which were found to be active during the Voyager 2 flyby. The bluish-green band visible in this image extends all the way around Triton near the equator; it may consist of relatively fresh nitrogen frost deposits. The greenish areas includes what is called the cantaloupe terrain, whose origin is unknown, and a set of "cryovolcanic" landscapes apparently produced by icy-cold liquids (now frozen) erupted from Triton's interior.

NASA Announces a New Tool for Visualizing Distance-Rate-Time Problems

NASA has released an interactive online tool that enables students to simultaneously visualize and manipulate three linked representations of a distance-rate-time problem. The side-by-side tool format features two airplanes (each flying at a constant speed) on merging jet routes, the corresponding distance-vs.-time graphs, and the corresponding linear equations.

Students can manipulate an airplane’s speed and starting position on its route, rotate or shift the associated line on the graph, and change the parameters of the associated equation. As students change one representation, the other representations update accordingly.

The free classroom materials include the tool, student workbooks, assessments, teacher guides, and alignments to grades 5-9 mathematics standards for all 50 states.

The new tool is an addition to FlyBy Math from NASA Smart Skies -- distance-rate-time investigations that engage students in the challenges faced by air traffic controllers.

To access the new tool, visit http://www.smartskies.nasa.gov/flyby.

To access all of the Smart Skies mathematics investigations, visit http://www.smartskies.nasa.gov/.

Questions about the Smart Skies website and tools should be directed to smartskies@mail.nasa.gov.

APU Tests Today for Discovery

Space shuttle Discovery's auxiliary power units will be the focus of technicians at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida today as they perform leak and functional tests on the devices. Workers are also verifying the spacecraft's airlock subsystem today and will continue that effort through Friday.

At NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, the astronauts' extensive training picks up with a long-duration Flight Day 3 rendezvous and docking simulation today.

Monday, 5 July 2010

STS-132 : You have met the crew, bought the poster now get the t-shirt

Shameless Plug

STS-132 Atlantis Mission T-shirts available in a range of sizes from the Spaceboosters Online Store

Ed Mitchell Pontefract Visit Success

Apollo 14 Astronaut Ed Mitchell wrapped up a successful 2 day visit to the Pontefract area on Friday night. The Apollo 14 Astronaut spent two days in the immediate area lecturing to (excited) adults and excited school children alike during his two day visit. He managed to squeeze in media opportunities too. Mission Accomplished Ed!, it was a great two days. Congratulations also to the organiser Ken Willoughby who can now take a well deserved break; in recent years Ken has been successful in bringing in a host of Apollo era astronauts including: 

Alan Bean, Apollo 12,
Charlie Duke, Apollo 16
Fred Haise, Apollo 13
Buzz Aldrin, Apollo 11

I'm sure there are more to come.




Photographs credit: Rick Mulhern



Space Shuttle : New Target Launch Date: Nov. 1

Space shuttle Discovery's STS-133 mission is now targeted for launch Nov. 1 at about 4:33 p.m. EDT. Endeavour's STS-134 mission is targeted for liftoff on Feb. 26, 2011, at about 4:19 p.m. EST. The target dates were adjusted because critical payload hardware for the STS-133 mission will not be ready in time for the previously targeted date. With Discovery's move, Endeavour had to plan for its next available window, which was February.

Sunday, 4 July 2010

Launched on the Fourth of July

Launched on the Fourth of July

Space shuttle Discovery and its seven-member crew launched at 2:38 p.m. EDT on July 4, 2006 to begin their journey to the International Space Station during the STS-121 mission. The shuttle made history as it was the first human-occupied spacecraft to launch on Independence Day. During the 12-day mission, the crew tested new equipment and procedures that increase the safety of the orbiters. It also performed maintenance on the space station and delivered supplies, equipment and a new Expedition 13 crew member to the station. This mission carried on analysis of safety improvements that debuted on the Return to Flight mission, STS-114, and built upon those tests.