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  • Women in space

    The commanders of both space shuttle Discovery (STS-120) and the International Space Station (ISS), the two crewed spacecraft now in orbit, are women. So, this week in the interstellar media, headlines gush with a milestone in the annals of gender. "Women set to take charge of space," said...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Daniel Pendick on 10-24-2007
    Tags: Daniel Pendick, NASA, spacecraft
  • So long, Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer. Don't forget to turn out the lights.

    At the veterinarian, they do it with an injection. When astronomers want to "put to sleep" one of their pets, they use a mouse click. Yesterday, astronomers at Johns Hopkins University shut down the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) satellite after 8 years of service. The craft...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Daniel Pendick on 10-19-2007
    Tags: Daniel Pendick, NASA, spacecraft
  • Those magnificent roving machines

    On September 11, 2007, NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity entered Victoria Crater on the rover's 1,291st martian day, or sol. NASA/JPL-Caltech Note to carmakers: Find out who the people were who built those fantastic rovers on Mars and hire them. They know how to make electric vehicles...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Dick McNally on 09-14-2007
    Tags: Dick McNally, NASA, spacecraft, solar system
  • What could have been

    With President Bush’s call for a return to the lunar surface, dozens of titles about the Moon have hit bookstores. From the volumes that have crossed my desk, most are nostalgic or historic accounts that showcase the people behind earlier lunar missions. Robert Godwin has assembled one of the more original...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Jeremy McGovern on 12-19-2007
    Tags: Jeremy McGovern, NASA, book reviews, spacecraft
  • Setting our sights on Mercury (part 3)

    On January 14, NASA’s MESSENGER spacecraft flew past Mercury. MESSENGER — short for MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging — made the first close-up observations of the innermost planet in 33 years. This flyby marked the first of three encounters with the planet, providing gravity...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Rich Talcott on 01-15-2008
    Tags: Rich Talcott, NASA, spacecraft, solar system
  • Setting our sights on Mercury (part 4)

    On January 14, NASA’s MESSENGER spacecraft flew past Mercury. MESSENGER — short for MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging made the first close-up observations of the innermost planet in 33 years. This flyby marked the first of three encounters with the planet, providing gravity...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Rich Talcott on 01-16-2008
    Tags: Rich Talcott, NASA, spacecraft, solar system
  • Setting our sights on Mercury (part 6)

    On January 14, NASA’s MESSENGER spacecraft flew past Mercury. MESSENGER — short for MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging — made the first close-up observations of the innermost planet in 33 years. This flyby marked the first of three encounters with the planet, providing gravity...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Rich Talcott on 01-25-2008
    Tags: Rich Talcott, NASA, spacecraft, solar system
  • Sorry, Mr. Bowie, there's still no life on Mars

    In 1967, Roger Patterson and Robert Gimlin captured the famous footage of what many cryptozooligists and kooks believe is Bigfoot. Perhaps sick of urban sprawl, the Patterson-Gimin Sasquatch relocated to the Red Planet. In a panoramic image captured by the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit in November 2007...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Jeremy McGovern on 01-30-2008
    Tags: Jeremy McGovern, NASA, spacecraft, solar system
  • Keeping time

    This morning, I was looking through images of the current shuttle mission on NASA’s site . I came across the photograph posted to the right. In it, STS-122 Commander Steven Frick is writing on a tablet in front of a control panel. I’m a gadget freak, so although the operations portion of the image is...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Jeremy McGovern on 02-14-2008
    Tags: Jeremy McGovern, NASA, spacecraft
  • Terminate with extreme prejudice

    A Delta II rocket carrying satellite USA-193 takes off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, December 14, 2006. USAF Tonight, the United States Navy may make its first attempt to shoot down failing spy satellite USA-193 . The Pentagon released notification, but conditions must be ideal for the...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Jeremy McGovern on 02-20-2008
    Tags: Jeremy McGovern, NASA, spacecraft
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