May 21, 2013 | Education, Exploration, International Space Station, Space Shuttle, NASA, Planet Earth, Space and Science, Space Research
Dr. Sally Ride, American’s first female astronaut, will be honored posthumously with the Presidential Medal of Freedom at the White House later this year, President Obama announced Monday. The announcement coincided with a tribute to Ride on Monday...
May 17, 2013 | Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, Space and Science, The Moon
NASA researchers have reported the biggest explosion on the lunar surface in the 8 year history of a Moon-monitoring program. The object was about the size of a small boulder and struck in the Moon’s Mare Imbrium, creating a flash nearly 10 times as bright as anything...
May 16, 2013 | Exploration, Hubble Space Telescope, International Cooperation, James Webb Space Telescope, NASA, Our Solar System, Space and Science, Space Shuttle, Why Space
NASA’s four year Kepler mission to search thousands of stars in the Milky Way galaxy for sun-like stars with planets that resemble the Earth has encountered a serious technical problem. A second of the four rapidly spinning internal “reaction...
May 15, 2013 | Ask the Expert, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Space and Science
This set of images from cameras on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter documents the appearance of a new cluster of impact craters on Mars. The orbiter has imaged at least 248 fresh craters, or crater clusters, on Mars.Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/Univ. of...
May 14, 2013 | Benefits of Space Exploration, Canadian Space Agency, Exploration, International Space Station, Space Research, Uncategorized
Three International Space Station astronauts reached Earth safely late Monday, including the first from Canada to command the six person orbiting science laboratory. The landing followed a flurry of activities that led to a Saturday spacewalk for the repair of a...
May 13, 2013 | Benefits of Space Exploration, Canadian Space Agency, European Space Agency, Exploration, International Space Station, Space Shuttle, NASA, Roscosmos
Three International Space Station crew members, including the orbiting lab’s first Canadian commander, are scheduled to depart for Earth late Monday, following a whirlwind spacewalk over the weekend by two U. S. astronauts to stem a sudden leak in the ammonia...
May 8, 2013 | Commercial Space, Exploration, International Space Station, Space Shuttle, NASA, Spaceports
Frederick “C. J.” Sturckow, a four time space shuttle commander and pilot, has become the first from NASA’s astronaut corps to join Virgin Galactic as a test pilot for SpaceShipTwo and WhiteKnightTwo carrier aircraft operations, the emerging...
May 6, 2013 | Benefits of Space Exploration, Exploration, International Space Station, Mars, NASA, Space and Science, Space Race, The Moon
Now ranked as the most innovative place to work within the U. S. federal government, NASA on Sunday marked the 52nd anniversary of the first American spaceflight. On May 5, 1961, NASA astronaut Alan B. Shepard lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Fla., aboard the...
Apr 29, 2013 | Asteroid Exploration, Benefits of Space Exploration, Commercial Space, Exploration, International Space Station, Space Shuttle, NASA, Mars, Space Research
Kay Bailey Hutchison, retired long time U. S. Senator from Texas who helped to shape and fund NASA’s future over nearly two decades as a Washington legislator, was honored Friday as the 2013 recipient of the Rotary National Award for Space Achievement and the...
Apr 27, 2013 | Ask the Expert, Blog, Book Reviews, Education Station, Exploration, International Space Station, Space Shuttle, NASA, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Space Race, Space Shuttle
Spacewalker – My Journey in Space and Faith as NASA’s Record-Setting Frequent Flyer by Jerry Ross with John Norberg; Purdue University Press, $29.95; 2013. As a former astronaut, Jerry Ross has written a personal account of his childhood in rural Indiana, then taking...