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  • Press Clips
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Inside Extravehicular Activities

  • Should an EVA become necessary, it may bear close similarities to the three spacewalks performed by Doug Wheelock (pictured) and Tracy Caldwell-Dyson in August 2010 (Credits: NAS).EVA Not Ruled Out as NASA Seeks Solution to Space Station Pump Module Malfunction
  • Photograph by Luca Parmitano of a sunset over the Aleutian Islands as seen from ISS (Credits: NASA).Astronaut Luca Parmitano on "Fear and Other Demons"
  • Mission Specialist Mike Massimino on EVA in 2002 to replace the Hubble's port solar array (Credits: NASA).Mike Massimino on Nearly Breaking the Hubble Telescope
  • The sheer size of the 15,000-pound Leasat-3 satellite is illustrated in this view of James “Ox” van Hoften manhandling it into space on Mission 51I (Credits: NASA).'If Something Happens': Mission 51I and the End of an Era, Part 2
  • In a triumphant ending to a triumphant space salvage, James “Ox” van Hoften strikes a Charles Atlas pose on the end of the shuttle’s RMS mechanical arm, seemingly hoisting the world on his shoulders (Credits: NASA).'Crankin’ APUs': Mission 51I and NASA’s ‘Can-Do’ Spirit, Part 1
  • Luca Parmitano works on the routing of data and Ethernet cables during EVA-23 (Credits: NASA).NASA Team Formed to Investigate EVA-23 Incident
  • Spacesuits lay idle until a leak in Parmitano's suit, pictured left, can be found and resolved (Credits: NASA).NASA Scrambles to Get Suit Kit to ISS as Leak Investigation Continues
  • Ed White, the first NASA astronaut to undertake an EVA (Credits: NASA).When EVAs Go Wrong
  • ISS Science Garage with astronauts Mike Massimino and Don Pettit (Credits: NASA)International Space Station Science Garage: EVA
  • Mostly Successful Spacewalk Releases New Debris
  • Count Down to Nov. 1 Spacewalk to Repair Radiator Ammonia Leak
  • Capturing a Spacewalk Moment
  • ISS Crew Gears Up for Spacewalks
  • How to Fight Tears in Space
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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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