SpaceShuttleDiscovery

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  • Space Shuttle Discovery to make final in-air appearance in 1,500-foot DC flyover

    by 
    Zach Honig
    Zach Honig
    04.10.2012

    Folks lucky enough to be in the nation's capital next week will have one final opportunity to gawk at Space Shuttle Discovery as the decommissioned spacecraft makes its way to its final resting place in Washington D.C. The shuttle is scheduled for a 1,500-foot flyover between 10 and 11 next Tuesday morning, passing over the National Mall and Reagan National Airport atop NASA's modified 747-100. The craft will then land at Dulles Airport before making a land-based journey to the Smithsonian Udvar-Hazy Air and Space Center, where it will replace the Enterprise shuttle, which is destined for the Intrepid Museum in Manhattan. That prototype shuttle is scheduled to land in New York City a few days later on April 23rd, where it will touch down at JFK mounted to what's likely to be the same Shuttle Carrier Aircraft scheduled to make the Discover delivery in D.C., though there's sadly no word of a similar photo op in NYC.

  • Space Shuttle Discovery returns from final trip, immediately begins search for final resting place

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    03.09.2011

    It's a bittersweet occasion, really. Space Shuttle Discovery has just returned from the unknown that we call "space," safely returning six astronauts and one zero Robonaut 2s to Earth after a 13-day mission. Discovery's legacy stretches back 27 years, compiling 39 flights during that span and making an indelible mark on the history of American space exploration. This guy is also the first shuttle to be retired after NASA was rocked a few years back by the impossible-to-ignore budget crunch, and already museums and institutes (29 at last count) are lining up to lobby their case for capturing it. No question, having this 170,000 pound benemoth at your museum would likely benefit admission numbers, but it's not like Discovery will be the only craft calling it quits in the near future. As of now, no decision has been made as to where it'll wheel off to for the final time, but you can bet whoever lands it will make quite the scene. [Image courtesy of Stephen Clark]

  • Space Shuttle Discovery launches at 4:50PM ET today with Robonaut 2 on board

    by 
    Donald Melanson
    Donald Melanson
    02.24.2011

    We doubt many of you need a reminder but, just in case, we're here to let you know that Space Shuttle Discovery is set for lift off today, at 4:50PM ET. While all shuttle launches are certainly worth watching, this one's particularly notable for a number of reasons -- it's the last mission for Discovery and the third-to-last mission for the entire Space Shuttle program, and it's the first mission to carry a humanoid robot into space: our friend Robonaut 2. Head on past the break to watch Spaceflight Now's live coverage of the launch. [Image: NASA / Flickr] Update: Liftoff! Humanoid robots in spaaaaaace.

  • NASA, now brought to you by Superfocus LLC (video)

    by 
    Thomas Ricker
    Thomas Ricker
    11.04.2010

    In what reads like ad copy or a particularly prescient passage from Snow Crash, the Wall Street Journal says that the next Space Shuttle Discovery launch will feature two astronauts wearing "Superfocus" glasses. Not familiar with Superfocus? Then perhaps you'll recall these adjustable glasses by their old TruFocals moniker? Superfocus glasses consist of a conventional prescription lens and a second, flexible lens that changes shape by moving a slider on top of the bridge. A trick that solves focal length issues for veteran astronauts who can't change focus from far to near as a natural part of aging. Click through for the full video explanation of Superfocus by its inventor Navin R. Johnson Dr. Stephen Kurtin.

  • NASA and GM's humanoid Robonaut2 blasting into space this September (video)

    by 
    Tim Stevens
    Tim Stevens
    04.14.2010

    Remember Robonaut2, the gold-headed robot that first flexed its biceps back in February? He's been called up -- way up. NASA has given him a one-way ticket to the International Space Station aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery on a departure that's currently scheduled for September. It's not entirely clear what he'll be doing up there beyond making awe-inspiring poses like the one shown above, but he is slated to help during spacewalks and will be the first humanoid robot to leave the atmosphere. We just want to know whose shirts he'll wear. Update: Thanks to Joe at the Johnson Space Center we now have a video commemorating this achievement after the break.

  • Space shuttle Discovery delivers new toilet pump to International Space Station

    by 
    Joshua Fruhlinger
    Joshua Fruhlinger
    06.03.2008

    In what is becoming a fascinating space-poop drama, the International Space Station had a fresh toilet pump delivered today by space shuttle Discovery. For the past couple weeks, astronauts were forced to perform manual flushes, but this pump promises to make things go down a bit easier. We're still under the impression that the toilet will be replaced in the Fall, so more relief is sure to come.