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  • Press Clips
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  • Engineering
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  • Space Disasters
  • Space on Earth
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Inside Space in Everyday Life

  • China’s Helium-3 Program: A Global Game-Changer
  • Canadian Space Agency astronaut Chris Hadfield, Expedition 34 flight engineer, floats freely in the Unity node of the International Space Station. credits: NASALife And Career Lessons From An Astronaut
  • Creative Uses for Satellite Images Proliferate with Increased Access
  • GPS Based Early Warning System Being Developed by NASA and Partner Institutes
  • You may have learned how the solar system works in primary school, but clearly not everyone did (Credits: NASA/Flickr user ImageEditor).Ignorance Is No Joke
  • Chris Hadfield plays guitar aboard Mir in 1995 (Credits: Canadian Press/HO/CSA).Astronauts as Entertainers
  • Most News is Good News
  • A Day in the Life of an Earthling – 2040 A.D.
  • UNESCO Artist for Peace: Unique Role for Sarah Brightman on ISS
  • Bas Lansdorp at the 2013 International Space Commerce Summit (Credits: Andrew Henry).International Space Commerce Summit: The Celebrity Factor
  • Astronaut training, such as the 2004 NASA parabolic flight exercise shown here, could soon become the subject of reality television (Credits: NASA).Reality Shows Take an Interest in Space
  • The men with “The Right Stuff” – and the famous book about them with the same name – go under the microscope in the Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press’ new offering. Photo Credit: NASA.Book Review of Spacefarers: Images of Astronauts and Cosmonauts in the Heroic Era of Spaceflight
  • MUOS Ground Station in Sicily Raises Protests and Concerns
  • Earth, a timelapse video sequence compiled by Michael Konig from ISS imageryEarth
  • Ambitious Crowdsourcing Project Does Not Convince the Crowd
  • Sci-fi Film Europa Report a “Cautionary Tale” for Future Missions to Jupiter’s Moon
  • Former cosmonaut Alexey Leonov, left, the first man to perform a spacewalk, passed an Olympic Torch to Mikhail Tyurin, flight engineer of Expedition 38/39 (Credits: Dmitry Chernyshenko).Your View from ISS: Delayed
  • Not Because It's Easy
  • China's First Lecture from Space a Sign of More to Come
  • Best of Chris Hadfield
  • Curiosity and Orion Parade for Presidential Inauguration
  • Over Earth and Under Moon
  • Renowned Astronomer and Science Popularizer Patrick Moore Dead at 89
  • A Cloudless Nighttime Earth
  • Lynx to Launch "Revolution" in Science Education
  • Endeavour Squeaks Down Los Angeles Streets, Reaches New Home
  • Space Shuttle Endeavour Lands in California
  • Endeavour's Final Journey Marred by Tree Chopping Controversy
  • One Small Step For a Man, One Giant Leap Into History
  • Celebrating Commercial Space 50 Years After Telstar-1
  • Shuttles on the Move
  • ESTEC-based editor oversees magazine aiming to make space safer
  • Astronaut Don Pettit Recreates the Stargate Sequence From 2001
  • Famous First Earthrise Over Moon Recreated
  • Space Shuttle Discovery Welcome Prepared
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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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