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by Molly McCall
Wed, December 12, 2007, 3:00 am PST

NASCAR is fun. Fighter jets are cool. But when it comes to engines, power, and feel-it-in-your-bones rocket propulsion, nothing compares to the spectacle of a space shuttle lift-off. This YouTube collection of NASA and amateur clips takes you to the launch pad and beyond. Witness Discovery's rare nighttime ascent to orbit. See the earth fall away as Atlantis spirals upward. Watch Endeavor, "flying straight as an arrow," move out from beneath its solid-rocket boosters. Ain't space technology grand? The brief video segments veer between far-off shots highlighting the full rush and flick of the booster engines' flames and shuttle eye-views from cameras mounted on external tanks. We also love the authoritative NASA voice-overs. There's something so enthralling about hearing them intone, "T-minus two minutes and counting." And every once in awhile, you catch an orator saying something like, "everything looking good on the bird." Does it ever!

Filed under: NASA, Videos, Space

by Molly McCall
Thu, March 22, 2007, 3:00 am PDT

It could be any stretch of dry land under a cloudless sky. The soil looks just as gritty and reddish brown, the rocks just as chunky and carelessly strewn, the far-off hills just as smoothly formed as any arid place known to humans. But this is not Earth. It is Mars. And the pale sky and sandy, coarse ground is truly and utterly alien. Over the course of five months last year, NASA's Spirit rover captured shot after shot of this area, which the space group dubbed the "Low Ridge." More than 1,400 of the images were then pieced together to form this remarkable—and interactive—panorama of the Martian vista. Hosted by a German site of 360-degree views, Winter on Mars allows you to scroll endlessly across this part of the Red Planet's surface and then, if you want, swoop upwards into its thin, blank atmosphere.

Filed under: NASA, Space, Mars

by Molly McCall
Mon, May 22, 2006, 3:00 am PDT

It's only rocket science. How hard can it be? Venture into this online NASA demo and find out what it takes to construct a craft that's worthy of space travel. Follow these simple steps...
  1. Select the rocket you'd like to assemble: Delta II or Atlas V.

     

  2. Scroll through the list of components. Click each one to get the lowdown on its role.

     

  3. If you suddenly find yourself overwhelmed by second stage and oxidizer fuel tanks, extended air-lit nozzles, or centaur forward adapters, don't panic. It's just missile anatomy, after all. Act knowing.

     

  4. Drag each piece to the rocket sprawled across the bottom of the display.

     

  5. Other thoughts may crop up, like: "Wow, the fuel tanks are really big." Just roll with them.

     

  6. At last, you finish—and have the satisfaction of watching your rocket blast into space. At which point, it immediately jettisons most of your hard work. What a thankless beast.

Filed under: NASA, Space

by Molly McCall
Sun, January 01, 2006, 3:00 am PST

The satellites and massive telescopes of space just got alot closer. International Space Station? Check. Weather satellites, U.S. Navy monitoring orbs? They're here. Thanks to the Missions Operations Laboratory at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, we now know right where they all are. From the Chandra Observatory to hundreds of artificial objects "swarming about our earth," much of what is hovering up there can be tracked and scrutinized from the comfort of the Web. Once launched, each of the mapping applications available here runs live, and several offer stunning 3D positioning. Rotate the displays, zoom in or out, and select coordinates. Then, just before you tear yourself away, sign up for an email alert so you can receive advance notice of future objects passing overhead.

Filed under: NASA, Astronomy, Space

Sun, May 09, 2004, 3:00 am PDT

Robots build cars, defuse bombs, not to mention attack each other for our amusement on late-night TV. They do so much for us and ask so little in return that showing one robot a little appreciate seems like the least we can do. So, with that in mind, please put your hands together for Robonaut! Developed by some of NASA's brightest minds, Robonaut not only has the looks to pass for an actual astronaut (five-fingered hands, realistic joint movement), but also possesses human-like peripheral vision and the ability to adjust to an ever-changing environment (a skill it will definitely need in orbit). While earthbound and under development for the time being, it's safe to assume this robot will make life in space easier for its fellow travelers once it blasts off.

Filed under: NASA, Space, Robotics


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