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Inside Radiation

  • artistic representations of an active, magnetic, toroidal shield used for protecting astronauts from astroparticles. credits: Giorgina Colleoni & Valerio CalvelliSpace Radiation Superconducting Shield
  • Balloon over Fleming Field (Credits: US Air Force).Rats … Cosmic Radiation Turns Hair Grey! | This Week In Space History
  • Could a Vegetable Compound Protect Against the Effects of Radiation?
  • Plastics May be Man’s Best Friend During Deep Space Travel
  • JPL Announces Curiosity Radiation Exposure Levels
  • Superconducting Magnets to Protect Spacecraft from Radiation
  • Canadian Experiment to Focus on the Deadliest Radiation
  • Another Step towards Better Radiation Protection in Space
  • PREDICCS Wants to Predict Radiation Danger for Astronauts
  • Chinese Use Space Radiation to Mutate Food Crops
  • Active Shielding: A New Approach to Radiation
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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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