NASA 's Super Guppy delivers space shuttle trainer to the Museum of Flight

ALAN BERNER / THE SEATTLE TIMES

A crew member of the Super Guppy cargo plane leans from the cockpit window as the plane is hooked to a tug outside the Museum of Flight Saturday, delivering part of the NASA space shuttle trainer.

BETTINA HANSEN / THE SEATTLE TIMES

NASA's Super Guppy aircraft, carrying crew compartment of the space shuttle trainer, makes a flyover around downtown Seattle on its way to The Museum of Flight.

ALAN BERNER / THE SEATTLE TIMES

The Super Guppy delivers plenty of cargo and decibels as it arrives at the Museum of Flight Saturday.

ALAN BERNER / THE SEATTLE TIMES

The front part of the Super Guppy cargo plane is cracked open as it swings forward 90-degrees so the space shuttle trainer can be unloaded Saturday.

ALAN BERNER / THE SEATTLE TIMES

The front part of the shrink-wrapped Space Shuttle trainer is moved on a specialty vehicle with the Super Guppy in the background, its cargo bay and cockpit area at a 90-degree angle at Boeing Field. The vehicle moving the trainer part was brought up from JBLM to assist.

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NASA 's Super Guppy delivers space shuttle trainer to the Museum of Flight

Huge crowd greets giant Super Guppy & it's cargo, Space Shuttle trainer crew compartment at Museum of Flight

Astronauts Gregory Johnson, a West Seattle High School grad, and Bonnie Dunbar, pictured left, were greeted by a thrilled Gov. Gregoire after they piloted, then landed, the NASA Super Guppy cargo plane Saturday, June 30. It brought the Space Shuttle crew compartment portion of the full-fuselage trainer in its "belly" which separated. It can be seen at the museum's Charles Simonyi Space Gallery. We will update with a slideshow shortly.

Thousands of onlookers seemed thrilled as the NASA Super Guppy cargo plane, which appears to be about nine months pregnant, did a "fly-by" over Boeing Field by the Museum of Flight Saturday, June 30, heading north toward downtown Seattle before returning to land. Inside its giant belly sat the 24-foot-long Space Shuttle crew compartment portion of the full-fuselage trainer, or FFT, awaiting its public, and a permanent place in the museum's Charles Simonyi Space Gallery.

It will join other components and will then look like an entire Space Shuttle. It arrived from Travis AFB, Fairfield, Ca., landing at Boeing at about 12:15 p.m. after circling the city and Everett's Paine Field. Speeches were given following its landing. Then the Guppy's cargo body divided, exposing, then liberating, the trainer compartment. It was shuttled across East Marginal Way to the gallery.

The museum signed a Space Act Agreement during a brief January ceremony at the Houston Space Center, which transferred ownership of the trainer to the Seattle Museum of Flight. The Space Shuttle trainer was used to educate astronauts for the past three decades.

Giving speeches were Museum of Flight President and CEO Doug King, Board President Mike Hallman, Governor Christine Gregoire, Congressman Jim McDermott, Space Shuttle astronauts Gregory Johnson of West Seattle, Bonnie Dunbar of Sunnyside, Wa., and Dr. Janet Kavandi of Carthage, Missouri, who earned her doctorate at the University of Washington, and other dignitaries. The astronauts were the Super Guppy's pilots on Saturday's flight.

Steve Pool

KOMO weather forecaster Steve Pool, a museum board of trustee member for 20 years, emceed. On the podium, Pool took a bit of credit for the weather cooperating, then leaped up from his seat with good humor to apologize to the public when it began to lightly rain.

"It's a very big deal," Pool told the West Seattle Herald, referring to the museum's latest acquisition. "I go back to when we just had the great gallery and we've made such huge progress. I'm just thrilled."

Gov. Gregoire

"I have not seen it before," Gov. Gregoire told the West Seattle Herald, referring to the Super Guppy, looking amazed. "It is one of a kind. Look at the enthusiasm in the crowd."

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Huge crowd greets giant Super Guppy & it's cargo, Space Shuttle trainer crew compartment at Museum of Flight

Museum of Flight welcomes space shuttle trainer

A space shuttle trainer landed at Boeing Field's Museum of Flight on Saturday.

The Space Shuttle Trainer Crew Compartment, aboard NASAs Super Guppy aircraft, arrived in Seattle just before 12:30 p.m.

The trainer is a simulator that every space shuttle astronaut has used in training.

Museum of Flight President and CEO Doug King was joined by Governor Christine Gregoire, Congressman Jim McDermott, astronauts Bonnie Dunbar, Greg Johnson, Janet Kavandi and pilots from the Super Guppy in welcoming the trainer, according to a museum spokesperson.

The trainer made its way from Sacramento, California to Boeing Feild.

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Museum of Flight welcomes space shuttle trainer

Space Flight Authority names new leader

WALLOPS ISLAND -- The Virginia Commercial Space Flight Authority has named a new executive director ahead of legislative changes aimed at boosting the group's efforts to promote commercial space activity, economic development and aerospace research at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Virginia's Eastern Shore.

Dale K. Nash, CEO of Alaska Aerospace, will take the helm beginning July 31, the authority's board of directors said Wednesday. He will replace Billie M. Reed, who has served as executive director since the authority was established in 1995 and has since worked with others to launch Virginia's space industry to one that contributes $7.6 billion in annual direct economic output and supports more than 28,000 jobs.

Nash has spent nearly 30 years in the aerospace industry and has been directly involved in more than 60 space shuttle flights throughout his career. He previously spent 14 years working on NASA's Space Shuttle/Human Space Flight programs as director of launch operations at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Nash's experience will be a "tremendous boost" as the authority works to become the top commercial space port in the U.S. and create much-needed economic development and jobs, said Virginia Secretary of Transportation Sean T. Connaughton, whose office took oversight of the authority from the secretary of commerce and trade's office last year.

The MARS spaceport is one of only four that is licensed by the FAA to launch rockets into orbit, but there are more than a dozen states that are either active or interested in commercial space activity, half of which have state-owned space authorities. The Virginia governor's office wants the spaceport to help create highly skilled, high-paying jobs as part of a plan to generate economic development. Maryland and Virginia partnered in 2004 to enhance those economic development efforts.

A report commissioned by the Virginia Department of Transportation last year said the authority needs to undergo a series of changes if it wants to become more competitive with spaceports in other states. Among other things, the study called for turning the spaceport on Wallops Island into a multiuse facility and restructuring its board to make it more conducive for recruiting qualified personnel, business continuity or marketing its services.

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The Virginia facility that provides launch facilities for public- and private-sector customers is at a crossroads and either needs to decide to stay with its historical strengths or "to participate in the 'new big commercial space' and incur the potential payoffs/associated risks of a new market," the report said.

Connaughton said that although it is evolving to small- and medium-lift orbital launches that will allow it to fulfill resupply needs for the International Space Station, the Eastern Shore launch site will concentrate on customers with small suborbital or scientific requirements rather than larger payload launches that traditionally take place in locations like Florida.

"We are going to focus all of our energies and resources on getting those customers who can take advantage of our location, our scheduling and our facilities," Connaughton said. "We are trying to maintain the foundation we have and use that to build additional jobs and economic development."

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Space Flight Authority names new leader

NASA: Space Flight Authority names new leader

WALLOPS ISLAND -- The Virginia Commercial Space Flight Authority has named a new executive director ahead of legislative changes aimed at boosting the group's efforts to promote commercial space activity, economic development and aerospace research at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Virginia's Eastern Shore.

Dale K. Nash, CEO of Alaska Aerospace, will take the helm beginning July 31, the authority's board of directors said Wednesday. He will replace Billie M. Reed, who has served as executive director since the authority was established in 1995 and has since worked with others to launch Virginia's space industry to one that contributes $7.6 billion in annual direct economic output and supports more than 28,000 jobs.

Nash has spent nearly 30 years in the aerospace industry and has been directly involved in more than 60 space shuttle flights throughout his career. He previously spent 14 years working on NASA's Space Shuttle/Human Space Flight programs as director of launch operations at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Nash's experience will be a "tremendous boost" as the authority works to become the top commercial space port in the U.S. and create much-needed economic development and jobs, said Virginia Secretary of Transportation Sean T. Connaughton, whose office took oversight of the authority from the secretary of commerce and trade's office last year.

The MARS spaceport is one of only four that is licensed by the FAA to launch rockets into orbit, but there are more than a dozen states that are either active or interested in commercial space activity, half of which have state-owned space authorities. The Virginia governor's office wants the spaceport to help create highly skilled, high-paying jobs as part of a plan to generate economic development. Maryland and Virginia partnered in 2004 to enhance those economic development efforts.

A report commissioned by the Virginia Department of Transportation last year said the authority needs to undergo a series of changes if it wants to become more competitive with spaceports in other states. Among other things, the study called for turning the spaceport on Wallops Island into a multiuse facility and restructuring its board to make it more conducive for recruiting qualified personnel, business continuity or marketing its services.

(Page 2 of 2)

The Virginia facility that provides launch facilities for public- and private-sector customers is at a crossroads and either needs to decide to stay with its historical strengths or "to participate in the 'new big commercial space' and incur the potential payoffs/associated risks of a new market," the report said.

Connaughton said that although it is evolving to small- and medium-lift orbital launches that will allow it to fulfill resupply needs for the International Space Station, the Eastern Shore launch site will concentrate on customers with small suborbital or scientific requirements rather than larger payload launches that traditionally take place in locations like Florida.

"We are going to focus all of our energies and resources on getting those customers who can take advantage of our location, our scheduling and our facilities," Connaughton said. "We are trying to maintain the foundation we have and use that to build additional jobs and economic development."

Read more from the original source:

NASA: Space Flight Authority names new leader

Space Flight Authority names Nash as new executive director

WALLOPS -- The Virginia Commercial Space Flight Authority Board of Directors this week announced the selection of Dale K. Nash to serve as the authority's new executive director beginning July 31. Nash will replace Dr. Billie Reed, who has served as executive director since the VCSFA was established in July 1995.

Reed in December 2011 notified the VCSFA board he planned to step down as executive director.

"We are very excited to have Dale join the VCSFA team," said Secretary of Transportation Sean T. Connaughton.

"His years of experience in the aerospace industry will be a tremendous boost to the authority as it works to become the number one commercial spaceport in the U.S. With his leadership, the Commonwealth can seize upon the tremendous advantages we have in the aerospace industry to grow the VCSFA and create much needed economic development and jobs."

Nash has spent over 29 years in the aerospace industry, most recently serving as Chief Executive Officer of Alaska Aerospace.

In this position, he managed six successful launches, certification of the Range Safety and Telemetry System, an expansion and modernization of the Kodiak Launch Complex, development of rapid launch enabling capabilities, and engineering planning for construction of a new medium-lift launch pad and processing facility.

Prior to joining Alaska Aerospace, Nash spent 14 years working on NASA's Space Shuttle/Human Space Flight programs with a stint as Director of Launch Operations at the Kennedy Space Center.

He also served as Vice President and General Manager of Thiokol's Solid Rocket Booster Operations and Program Manager of the Orion program for United Space Alliance/Lockheed.

Throughout his career, Mr. Nash has been directly involved in over 60 space shuttle flights.

Gov. McDonnell during the past General Assembly session introduced legislation, set to take effect July 1, to reform the governance and organizational structure of the VCSFA and provide the authority with adequate funding to carry out its mission.

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Space Flight Authority names Nash as new executive director

Seattle’s Museum of Flight Welcomes Space Shuttle Trainer Crew Compartment

SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Amid crowds of cheering spectators, The Museum of Flight in Seattle today welcomed the Space Shuttle Trainer Crew Compartment, the most recognizable piece of the Shuttle Trainer. Arriving from Houstons Johnson Space Center aboard NASAs Super Guppy aircraft, the event kicked off ShuttleFest 2012, a week-long celebration to commemorate the historic artifacts arrival to its final home.

Museum of Flight President and CEO Doug King, Gov. Christine Gregoire, Congressman Jim McDermott and other dignitaries hosted a celebration to welcome the Space Shuttle Trainer Crew Compartment, which is 28.75 feet long, 19 feet wide and 23.5 feet high. After its arrival, the Space Shuttle Trainer was gingerly removed from the nose-cone of NASAs Super Guppy before being slowly transported across East Marginal Way to its final resting place inside The Museum of Flights Charles Simonyi Space Gallery. The Shuttle Trainer is being delivered in several stages over the coming months, with the Payload Bay also arriving aboard the Super Guppy in two stages later this summer.

Todays historic arrival marks an exciting step forward in the continued evolution and growth of the aerospace industry in Washington state and helps launch the next era of space flight, said Museum of Flight President and CEO Doug King. The Charles Simonyi Space Gallery will be one of the premier aerospace galleries in the world and will serve to inspire future generations of aviation and aerospace entrepreneurs.

Built in the 1970s, the Shuttle Trainer is the only one of its kind in the world and is the simulator in which each of the 335 space shuttle astronauts trained. It will be on display in the 15,500-square-foot Charles Simonyi Space Gallery, where it joins a collection of other rare space artifacts including Simonyis Soyuz TMA-14 spacecraft and interactive exhibits showcasing space travel from the earliest days of the space shuttle program to the future of commercial space flight.

For more information on the arrival of the Space Shuttle Trainer Crew Compartment and The Museum of Flight, please contact Mike Bush at (253) 307-3225, mbush@museumofflight.org or Lee Keller at (206) 799-3805, lee@thekellergroup.com.

ShuttleFest 2012 is sponsored by Boeing and BECU.

About The Museum of Flight

The independent, non-profit Museum of Flight is one of the largest air and space museums in the world, attracting more than 400,000 visitors annually. The museums collection includes more than 150 historically significant air- and spacecraft, as well as the Red Barnthe original manufacturing facility of The Boeing Co. The museums aviation and space library and archives are the largest on the West Coast. More than 100,000 individuals are served annually by the museums on-site and outreach educational programs. The Museum of Flight is accredited by the American Associations of Museums, and is an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution. For more information on The Museum of Flight, visit http://www.museumofflight.org.

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Seattle’s Museum of Flight Welcomes Space Shuttle Trainer Crew Compartment

Shenzhou-9 Successfully Landed – Video

29-06-2012 04:38 29 June 2012 | CCTV BEIJING—A Chinese space capsule with three astronauts aboard returned to Earth on Friday from a 13-day mission to an orbiting module that is a prototype for a future permanent station. The Shenzhou 9 re-entry capsule parachuted to a landing on the grasslands of the country's sprawling Inner Mongolia region at about 9:53am local time. China declared the mission to the Tiangong 1 module—the country's longest and most challenging space mission yet—a major stride for its ambitious space program.

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Shenzhou-9 Successfully Landed - Video

Space Exploration and Higher Education Will Both Benefit from New Partnership with NASA, …

June 29, 2012 - As agency-wide effort, NASA Science and Technology Institute for Minority Institutions (NSTI-MI) is 3-year competitive program aimed at enhancing STEM capabilities of Historically Black College and University (HBCU) students. There are 10 students and 3 professors from 2 HBCU institutions at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, which involves partnership with 2 private commercial companies: Mentor Graphics (Wilsonville, OR) and Triad Semiconductor (Winston-Salem, NC). NASA NASA Ames Reseach Center Moffett Field, CA, 94035 USA Press release date: June 15, 2012

GREENBELT, Md. -- While many college students have started applying what they are learning at school in summer internships, ten students and three professors from two Historically Black College and University (HBCU) institutions are now at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. The final results of their efforts may one day be orbiting above the Earth or flying off into deep space.

An agency-wide effort, the NASA Science and Technology Institute for Minority Institutions, or NSTI-MI, is a three-year competitive program designed to enhance the science, technology, engineering and math capabilities of HBCU students. The unique nature of Goddard's arrangement is that it also involves a partnership with two private commercial companies.

NASA Goddard, Alabama A&M University in Huntsville, Tuskegee University, Ala., along with Mentor Graphics in Wilsonville, Ore. and Triad Semiconductor of Winston-Salem, N.C., have entered into this innovative collaboration. The goal is to have these university professors knowledgeable in microelectronics and computer science work with their students to build a library of electronic designs that can be rapidly and affordably built and used to design electronics for future spacecraft and instrument control.

"One of the challenges in undergraduate education is to have relevant and real design-and-build projects for students," said Lucy McFadden, chief for higher education at Goddard. "With efforts such as this, we have a ready structure to motivate students and give them a real learning environment with an exciting outcome."

Microelectronics design for space missions is demanding. Being able to optimize the size, weight and power of electronics is a mission-critical activity for all projects. At the same time, outer space presents a harsh radiation environment requiring electronics to operate under extreme conditions.

The researchers will utilize a design environment provided by Triad known as ViaDesigner(TM). ViaDesigner is a new electronic design automation tool that enables system-level engineers, who have no previous integrated circuit design experience, to create their own application-specific integrated circuits. ViaDesigner is based on the Mentor Graphics SystemVision design environment. Prior to the students' arrival at Goddard, Mentor Graphics provided training with their SystemVision tool.

"Using a virtual prototype to try out a design instead of waiting for physical hardware to be built is so natural for the upcoming generation of engineers," said Darrell Teegarden, Director of System Modeling & Analysis Business Unit, Mentor Graphics. "Our SystemVision environment is perfect for NASA engineers to design and integrate Triad Semiconductor devices into a larger system -- including off-the-shelf components, sensors and actuators, and other real-world effects."

"Triad is excited about NASA's evaluating VCA technology and ViaDesigner as a potential way to develop mixed-signal integrated circuits," said Reid Wender, vice-president, marketing and technical sales at Triad Semiconductor. "As evaluation and development proceed, the goal will be to create a design flow that supports mission requirements across a number of NASA flight programs while reducing development time, cost and improving reliability."

For more information about each of the organizations involved, visit:

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Space Exploration and Higher Education Will Both Benefit from New Partnership with NASA, ...

China's giant, quiet step in space

By Leroy Chiao, Special to CNN

updated 8:47 AM EDT, Fri June 29, 2012

A view from Shenzhou-9 spacecraft as it prepares to link with the Tiangong-1 module.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Editor's note: Leroy Chiao is a former NASA astronaut and commander of the International Space Station. He served as a member of the 2009 Review of U.S. Human Spaceflight Plans Committee, and is the special adviser for human spaceflight to the Space Foundation.

(CNN) -- In May, SpaceX became the first of the new generation of commercial aerospace companies to deliver cargo to the International Space Station. The cargo delivery was part of the first flight test of the integrated Falcon-9 launch vehicle and the Dragon capsule spacecraft with rendezvous and berthing mechanism systems.

By all accounts, the major test objectives were successfully achieved. Previously, such spacecraft and operations had only been achieved by governments. What made this a historic first was that a commercial company had done it. The news was widely covered in the international media, especially in the United States.

One month later, China launched its fourth crewed space mission, Shenzhou-9. This was also a history-making flight, in that China, which had in 2003 become only the third nation capable of launching astronauts into space (and is now only one of two, since the retirement of the U.S. space shuttle in 2011), demonstrated crewed rendezvous and docking to their orbital module, Tiangong-1. The crew also featured China's first female astronaut. They spent several days docked to Tiangong-1 conducting various operations, before safely returning to Earth on Thursday night.

Leroy Chiao

China's mission was widely covered in the international media, but the coverage in the United States was notably quieter than that of SpaceX. This is somewhat understandable, as SpaceX is an American company. But the sentiment of many in the United States is that the Chinese mission was a big "So what?" After all, the United States and Soviet governments had demonstrated crewed docking missions back in the 1960s, and operationally, China is still far behind.

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China's giant, quiet step in space

Giant space artifact comes to Seattle on Saturday

SEATTLE

A gigantic piece of space history is set to splash down at Seattle's Museum of Flight on Saturday.

Although the Space Shuttle Trainer has never left the earth's atmosphere, museum officials say Seattle has won the biggest prize in the competition to show and explain this period in NASA history, since visitors won't just get to look at this space artifact, they'll be able to climb aboard.

Seattle came in fifth place in the contest among 21 museums and space centers hoping to land one of the nation's four space shuttles after the 30-year program ended last year.

Arriving this weekend at the museum in south Seattle is the nearly 29-foot-long, 19-foot-wide and 23-foot-tall crew cabin of the full-scale plywood mock-up that looks like a space shuttle without wings. The payload bay is scheduled to arrive in two pieces in July and August and a mock-up of the engine section is being assembled locally.

It will cost a total of $2 million to get the trainer to its new home in Seattle. Museum officials say that's another advantage of the trainer over the real space shuttles, which cost as much as ten times as much to move, partly because they can't be disassembled first.

By early October, visitors to the museum near Boeing Field should be able to walk aboard the shuttle trainer, which was used by every astronaut to ever fly aboard a space shuttle. They'll be able to touch and smell the giant vehicle, imagine flying it themselves and maybe even impress their friends by holding their wedding aboard.

"In retrospect, I think we did get something better," said museum president Doug King.

Visitors this weekend and through the months while the trainer is reassembled will be able to visit the gallery and see the work as it progresses.

"It's the first time we've built a gallery in front of the public," King said.

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Giant space artifact comes to Seattle on Saturday

Orion Capsule—Say Hello to the Future of Manned Space Flight [Video]

NASA didn't completely dump the idea of manned extra-terrestrial flight. It just needed some space. Before the agency resumes its manned missions sometime in 2021, NASA will need somewhere to put the astronauts. A new generation of reusable spacecraft, capable of zipping beyond the current limits. Something like the Orion Capsule.

Officially dubbed the Orion MPCV (Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle), this craft is specifically built to travel far, far beyond Low Earth Orbitlike the Moon, Mars, or even deep spacethen return safely home. NASA plans to use a fleet of these spacecraft for just about everything, from routine supply runs to the ISS to dropping a crew on a passing asteroid. Developed by Lockheed Martin Space Systemscoincidentally, also the builders of the Delta IV rocket that the Orion ridesthe spacecraft is comprised of three primary subsystems.

NASA is dead serious about preventing another Challenger disaster. As such, the uppermost section of the Orion is dedicated to the launch abort system (LAS). This tower is designed to instantly detach and rocket the crew capsule to safety if something goes awry during liftoff. It also helps shield the crew from heat and pressure changes during the rise to orbit before popping off and falling back to Earth once the MPCV reaches altitude. Fun fact: the rocket-powered abort motor the LAS uses to separate is actually more powerful than the one employed to shoot John Glenn into orbit back in 1962.

If you are an astronaut aboard the Orion, this is where you want to be. The crew module sits between the LAS and the Service Module (aka the engine and life-support). Constructed of an aluminum-lithium alloy, it can hold up to six crew members along with all their scientific equipment and matched luggage.

It offers a range of improvements over previous capsules including a better-designed cockpit, more-powerful computers, indoor plumbing, and an emergency auto-docking feature. The glass cockpit is actually the same one that Honeywell designed for the Boeing 787. It takes over the repetitive monitoring tasks that Apollo crews used to have to continually check themselves. The auto-dock feature is exactly what it sounds like. Once in orbit, the on-board computers will autonomously rendezvous with other spacecraft rather than rely on humans to do it. However, the most exciting new featurefor the astronauts at leastis the inclusion of a "relief tube" in the capsule. Rather than crap in a plastic bag, as the Apollo guys did, the Orion will use a more discreet and sanitary system originally developed aboard Skylab.

Opposed to the Space Shuttles, with were each used over and over, the Orion crew module is only slightly reusable. Each one is expected to withstand ten flights before being retired. And, interestingly, the crew module has no landing gearit is a water landing or nothing for the Orion.

The service module is where the magic happens. Magic, meaning, the technologies that keep astronauts from freezing/exploding in the dark void. The service module is built of the same aluminum-lithium alloy as the Crew Module. It controls in-flight propulsiongenerated by a "7500-pound thrust, pressure-fed, regeneratively cooled, storable bi-propellant, rocket engine made by Aerojet" according to NASAand provides water and breathable air for the crew as well as prevents the control systems from freezing. It even has unpressurized cargo space for equipment and unlucky stowaways. And, while the LAS pops off just after liftoff, the Service Module remains connected to the Crew Module until the orbiter is ready to begin reentry.

In another American first, the Service Module will incorporate deployable solar panels to capture solar energy while in flight, much like the Mars Landers' UltraFlex wings. This integration eliminates the need to carry heavy, unreliable fuel cells and all the necessary bits and pieces to use the fuel, which makes the Orion lighter and more agile.

All of these systems are currently coming together at the Kennedy Space Center ahead of a critical test flight scheduled for early 2014. Orion is expected to take off from Space Launch Complex 37, orbit the Earth twice at an altitude of over 3,600 milesthat's fifteen times LEObefore reentering the atmosphere at 25,000 MPH splashing down somewhere in the Pacific. This, of course, will be an unmanned test flight.

"This flight test is a challenge. It will be difficult. We have a lot of confidence in our design, but we are certain that we will find out things we do not know," Orion Program Manager Mark Geyer told the Orlando Sentinel. "Having the opportunity to do that early in our development is invaluable, because it will allow us to make adjustments now and address them much more efficiently than if we find changes are needed later. Our measure of success for this test will be in how we apply all of those lessons as we move forward."

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Orion Capsule—Say Hello to the Future of Manned Space Flight [Video]

Chinese crew returns to Earth after ambitious test flight

China's fourth manned space flight ended with a jarring touchdown in Inner Mongolia after a successful flight to test docking procedures and techniques needed for building a Mir-class space station later this decade.

China's Shenzhou 9 spacecraft, carrying two men and the first Chinese woman to fly in space, returned to Earth on Friday after an ambitious flight to a prototype space station module, plunging back into the atmosphere and descending under a large parachute to a jarring touchdown in Inner Mongolia.

The re-entry was carried live on Chinese television, with commentary, shots of the crew in the cramped decent module and views of the spacecraft's fiery re-entry plume as it streaked across the sky on a steep northeasterly descent toward the landing zone.

The Shenzhou 9 spacecraft descends under a large parachute, on target for a landing in Inner Mongolia.

The 12-day 15-hour mission ended with a jarring rocket-assisted landing in Siziwang Banner, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, around 10:04 a.m. local time (GMT+8; 10:04 p.m. EDT Thursday). The spacecraft appeared to slide along on its base for an instant before rolling end over end, coming to rest on its side.

Within minutes, recovery crews stationed nearby reached the landing site, opened the vehicle's hatch and carried out initial medical checks. The crew was said to be in good health and all three smiled and waved to well wishers when they left the vehicle more than an hour after touchdown.

"I feel very happy and very proud of my country," Liu Yang, China's first female "taikonaut," told an interviewer.

All three crew members were to be flown by helicopter to Beijing for more extensive medical exams, debriefing and reunions with friends and family.

Recovery crews work to help the Shenzhou 9 crew members out of their cramped spacecraft after landing.

Launched June 16 from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in north central China, commander Jing Haipeng, the first Chinese astronaut to make a second spaceflight, monitored an automated docking with the Tiangong 1 space station module on June 18. Jing, Liu Yang and Liu Wang then floated into the space station module for more than a week of tests and experiments.

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Chinese crew returns to Earth after ambitious test flight

Alion Protective Coating Used in First SpaceX Flight to International Space Station

MCLEAN, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Alion Science and Technology, an employee-owned, engineering, R&D, IT and operational solutions company, provided a protective coating to Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) Dragon capsule for its first flight to the International Space Station (ISS). Alion applied a conductive thermal control coating to the Dragon Trunk, the cargo portion of the Dragon spacecraft. Since shipping aerospace hardware to a stationary coatings facility can often be difficult, costly and time-consuming, Alion engineers developed a portable coatings application system that can be easily transported. Using this new system, Alions experts sprayed protective coatings onsite at SpaceX facilities.

We are excited to support such an important test mission that could radically impact the way cargo is delivered to the International Space Station, said Chris Amos, Alion Senior Vice President and Manager of the Technology Solutions Group. Alion chemists pioneered the development of unique materials to protect aerospace components, and now our portable application system is a cost- and time-saving alternative to shipping components to our coatings lab. Its a game-changing solution that can help make the entire launch preparation process more efficient.

Alion has been developing and applying aerospace coatings on government and commercial satellites and spacecraft since the early days of the U.S.-Russia space race.

About Alion Science and Technology

Alion Science and Technology delivers advanced engineering and technology solutions to strengthen national defense, homeland security, energy generation and the environment. Building on 75 years of R&D experience, Alion combines engineering expertise with operational experience and unique technologies to bring insight to multiple business areas: Naval Architecture & Marine Engineering; Defense Operations; Modeling & Simulation; and Engineering Design & Integration. Based in McLean, Virginia, Alion employee-owners are located at major offices, customer sites and laboratories worldwide. For more information, visit Alion online at http://www.alionscience.com.

This press release contains information about managements view of Alions future expectations, plans and prospects that constitute forward-looking statements for purposes of the safe harbor provisions under The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially from those indicated by these forward-looking statements as a result of a variety of risk factors and uncertainties discussed in documents periodically filed by Alion with the SEC. Due to such uncertainties and risks, readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof.

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Alion Protective Coating Used in First SpaceX Flight to International Space Station

Space Pictures This Week: Mickey Mouse Craters, More

Suspended Stars

Image by Rolf Olsen, Your Shot

Seen from a New Zealand observatory, the young star cluster NGC 6193 (center) appears suspended within the nebula NGC 6188. The nebula itself is littered with thousands of dimmer, colorful stars in this image recently submitted to National Geographic's Your Shot photo community.

NGC 6188 is a large-emission nebula some 4,000 light-years away from Earth in the constellation Ara. (See more nebula pictures.)

Published June 28, 2012

Photograph courtesy DLR

The German Aerospace Center's unmanned SHEFEX II spacecraft takes off from the Andya Rocket Range in Norway on June 22. Ten minutes later the 43-foot-tall (13-meter-tall) rocket landed safely west of Spitsbergen, Norway.

As it re-entered the atmosphere, SHEFEX (SHarp Edge Flight EXperiment) endured temperatures over 4,500 degrees Fahrenheit (2,500 degrees Celsius), and its 300 sensors sent measurement data to a ground station.

"The SHEFEX II flight takes us one step further in the road to developing a space vehicle built like a space capsule but offering the control and flight options of the space shuttle much more cost-effectively," project manager Hendrik Weihs said in a statement.

(See "SpaceX Launches for Space Station-Like 'Winning the Super Bowl.'")

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Space Pictures This Week: Mickey Mouse Craters, More

Curiosity Flight Path Slightly Adjusted By NASA

June 27, 2012

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com

NASA made some slight adjustments to its Mars Science Laboratorys flight path on Tuesday, ensuring its rover makes an accurate landing to the Martian site.

The one-ton rover is expected to arrive at the Red Planet on August 5, 2012, after venturing through space towards Mars since its November 26, 2011 launch.

The landing will mark the beginning of the rovers two-year prime mission to investigate whether Mars ever offered an environment favorable for microbial life.

The latest flight path adjustment is the third, and smallest, since its launch. NASA engineers burned the spacecrafts thrusters for just 40 seconds.

Spacecraft data and doppler-effect changes in radio signal from MSL indicate the maneuver was successful, according to NASA.

The maneuver adjusted the rovers location where it will enter Mars atmosphere by about 125 miles, and advances the time of entry by about 70 seconds.

This puts us closer to our entry target, so if any further maneuvers are needed, I expect them to be small, JPLs Tomas Martin-Mur, the missions navigation team chief, said in a statement.

NASA said there could be up to three additional trajectory correction maneuvers during the final eight days of flight.

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Curiosity Flight Path Slightly Adjusted By NASA

Preview: 3-D Space Shuttle Movie Will Bring the Launch Pad to Your Living Room

If you missed the final launch of the Space Shuttle, or the first private spacecraft rendezvous with the International Space Station, fear not. A new documentary to be released late this year promises you a fiery, 3-D, launch-pad view of these historic flights.

A preview (above) of the film, Space Shuttle & The New Pioneers, was unveiled at the SETICON II conference June 22 in Santa Clara, California. The film chronicles the final days of the Space Shuttle program, from inside NASAs Johnson Space Center in Houston to the launch pad at Cape Canaveral in Florida.

But since executive producer David Knight felt he couldnt end the movie by saying 12,000 people were laid off, the film also follows the beginnings of the private space flight boom, as companies likeSpaceX blast up to orbit.

The movies makers are crowdsourcing some of theirfunding through the website Kickstarteruntil June 30. The film, planned for limited theatrical release, will be availableon 3-D Blu-ray, as well as 2-D high-definition DVD, and will be provided for free to educational institutions, in the hopes of exciting kids about science and technology. Wired talked with Knight at SETICON about the film and the future of manned spaceflight.

Wired: Why did you decide to make this movie?

David Knight: When we started, it was a notion that somebody ought to cover the last missions of the space shuttle program. There had been many, many documentaries that tell you what the space shuttle is and about the astronauts and the crews, but nobody was covering the end of the space shuttle program and why it was ending. It wasnt a simple answer, like Congress forgot the money. And what comes after it? It turns out a plethora of things are coming after it that arent just what SpaceX CEO Elon Musk is doing.

Early in the process I found myself standing underneath the Shuttle Discovery with Charles Bolden, the head of NASA, and I realized that there couldnt be a more important mission than getting young people excited about science and technology.

Wired: How did you first get involved in the spaceflight scene?

Knight:Back in 2003, I was visiting my parents and my brother had brought a stack of magazines. There was a copy of Wired, and on the cover was this crazy bug-eyed looking machine a thing called SpaceShipOne, developed by the famous aircraft designer Burt Rutan. Burt Rutan was building this using financing from the co-founder of Microsoft, Paul Allen. And they were going to compete for the $10 million AnsariX Prize.

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Preview: 3-D Space Shuttle Movie Will Bring the Launch Pad to Your Living Room

Kennedy Space Center's 50th Anniversary Celebration Includes Nod to the Past and Look to the Future

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla., June 27, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex will celebrate the 50th anniversary of Kennedy Space Center on Sunday, July 1 with a program that includes NASA officials discussing the historic spaceport and the dynamic transformation underway to support the next generation of space exploration.

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120518/NY09986-a ) (Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120518/NY09986LOGO-b )

Beginning the program at 2 p.m. Sunday is the panel discussion, "Kennedy Space Center: Past, Present and Future," at the Astronaut Encounter Theater. The select NASA panel is scheduled to include Carol Scott of the Program Control and Integration Office within the Commercial Crew Program, and Stu McClung of the Orion Crew/Service Module Office.

Scott will discuss how the Commercial Crew Program is facilitating commercial vehicle development and certification to enable the safe transportation of NASA astronauts to and from the International Space Station and other low-Earth orbit destinations. McClung will talk about the Orion spacecraft being developed to carry astronauts farther into the solar system than ever before. On July 2, NASA is marking the arrival at Kennedy Space Center of the first space-bound Orion spacecraft.

At 3 p.m. Sunday at the visitor complex's NASA Central area, the 65-member Orlando Concert Band will present a musical salute to Kennedy Space Center with patriotic music and marches. Associate Music Director Aaron Lefkowitz will lead the band in such selections as "Armed Forces Salute," "Apollo 13," "America the Beautiful," and "The Stars and Stripes Forever."

Completing the program is Scott Bolton, principal investigator for NASA's Juno mission to Jupiter, who will take visitors on a visual journey of recent scientific discoveries made as a result of exploration of the solar system. The presentation begins at 4:30 p.m. at Exploration Space.

The 50th anniversary programming is complimentary to guests with paid admission.

"This is a great occasion for everyone who loves John F. Kennedy Space Center," said Bill Moore, chief operating officer of the visitor complex. "For 50 years, Kennedy has been the gateway to space, carrying astronauts into space aboard rockets and space shuttles, launching space exploration devices and constructing the International Space Station.

"We're celebrating the many historic achievements of the space program over the last 50 years which visitors can experience here like nowhere else plus the exciting things going on today to prepare Kennedy Space Center for commercial space flight and the Orion deep-space program," Moore said.

On July 1, 1962, the space center was officially acknowledged as an operating spaceflight center under the name Launch Operations Center. The name was later changed to John F. Kennedy Space Center in honor of the president and his vision of Americans visiting the moon.

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Kennedy Space Center's 50th Anniversary Celebration Includes Nod to the Past and Look to the Future