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Inside Space Colonization

  • An artist's depiction of a vast cylindrical space colony ship containing more than a million people on a voyage to the stars. Artist Rick Guidice created this vision for NASA in the 1970s. Credit: Rick Guidice/NASA Ames Research CenterKim Stanley Robinson’s Aurora: A Review
  • Tweets from the High Frontier: Food, Leisure, and Social Life in Space Colonies
  • Kalpana One seen from exteriorLiving in Space 6: Beyond O’Neill
  • Cylindrical colonies facing the SunLiving In Space 5: The Structures Amidst the Stars
  • While picturesque, the stresses of living aboard the ISS can be immense, and give us a profound look at the difficulties that lay ahead (Credits: NASA).Living In Space 4: Mental Wellbeing and Day To Day Living
  • NASA's NEOWISE program in 2011 was used to detect asteroids over 330 feet. Each dot represents an asteroid, with the green dots representing the inner planets. NASA estimates over 19,000 such asteroids in our local area, the image compares NASAs old model of NEO detection with its new, NEOWISE, model (Credits: NASA).Living In Space 3: Asteroids, Friend or Foe?
  • How to Survive in Space: A Space Prepper's Guide to the End of the Earth
  • An artist's impression of Tasha9503's space hotel (Credits: Tasha9503).From Rocket to Space Hotel
  • A coronal mass ejection captured by the SOHO satellite (credits: NASA).Living in Space: Radiation
  • Fig. 8 Domes from small cable-stayed cells with nets by Sergey MakarovModern Dreams About the Sky and the Earth
  • The Stanford Torus, one of several designs proposed by O'Neill, would house around 10,000 people in its central ring (Credits: Rick Guidice/NASA Ames Research Center).Living in Space – An Introduction
  • Milestones to Space Settlement: An NSS Roadmap
  • S.H.E.E. Brings Space Architecture to Earth: Pan-European Consortium Launches an Innovative Project
  • NASA Plans Deep Space Outpost Near Moon
  • NASA Believes 3D Printing is the Future of Space Construction
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Browse The Space Shuttle Columbia Disaster

  • Evidence of foam loss preceding the disastrous Shuttle Columbia reentry (Credits: NASA)How We Nearly Lost Discovery: Returning to Flight After Columbia
  • Remembering Columbia
  • Learning from Columbia
  • Remnants of the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, stored in the RLV hangar at Kennedy Space Center (Credits: NASA).Organizational Factors of the Columbia Disaster
  • The Columbia Disaster and Space Program Safety
  • Columbia And The Day of Remembrance
  • Sixteen Minutes from Home
  • STS-107: Columbia's Lost Crew
  • Columbia debris reconstructionTimeline of the Columbia Disaster
  • Columbia Disaster Recommended Reading
  • Sacriflight by Lloyd Behrendt, commemorates Columbia's last launchColumbia Disaster Creative Works
  • The Columbia Disaster In Perspective
  • A trajectory analysis that used a computational fluid dynamics approach to determine the likely position and velocity histories of the foam (Credits: NASA Ref [1] p61).Cause and Consequences of the Columbia Disaster
  • According to CAIB, destruction of the crew module took place over a period of 24 seconds, beginning at an altitude of approximately 42,672m and ending at 32,000m (Credits: NASA).Lessons Learned from the Columbia Disaster
  • Columbia streaking over the Very Large Array radio telescope in Socorro, New Mexico (Credits: NASA).Impact of Columbia Disaster on US Aviation Safety
  • Columbia debris reconstructionLiving with Columbia: Interview with Mike Cianilli
  • Remembering the Columbia Crew, One Day at a Time
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