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Nasa
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{{otheruses4|the U.S. space agency|the automotive racing organization|National Auto Sport Association}}
Image:logo-nasa-800px.png NASA_logo.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|right|184px|[[NASA logo.html" title="Meaning of right|184px|[[NASA logo">thumb|right|184px|[[NASA logo">right|184px|[[NASA logo">thumb|right|184px|[[NASA logo
{{Spoken |En-NASA.ogg|2005-09-01}}
The '''National Aeronautics and Space Administration''' ('''NASA'''), which was established in 1958, is the agency responsible for the public space program of the
United States United States of America. It is also responsible for long-term civilian and military
aerospace research.
History
Space Race
{{main|Space Race}}
Image:Mercury 3.jpg May_5.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|200px|left|[[May 5,
1961 launch of Redstone rocket and NASA's Mercury 3 capsule ''
Freedom 7'' with
Alan Shepard Jr. on the United States' first human flight into sub-orbital space. (Atlas rockets were used to launch Mercury's orbital missions.).html" title="Meaning of 200px|left|[[May 5">thumb|200px|left|[[May 5,
1961 launch of Redstone rocket and NASA's Mercury 3 capsule ''
Freedom 7'' with
Alan Shepard Jr. on the United States' first human flight into sub-orbital space. (Atlas rockets were used to launch Mercury's orbital missions.)">200px|left|[[May 5">thumb|200px|left|[[May 5,
1961 launch of Redstone rocket and NASA's Mercury 3 capsule ''
Freedom 7'' with
Alan Shepard Jr. on the United States' first human flight into sub-orbital space. (Atlas rockets were used to launch Mercury's orbital missions.)
Following the
Soviet space program's launch of the world's first man-made satellite (''
Sputnik 1'') on
October 4,
1957, the attention of the United States turned toward its own fledgling space efforts. The
Congress of the United States U.S. Congress, alarmed by the perceived threat to U.S. security and technological leadership (known as "''Sputnik Shock''"), urged immediate and swift action; President
Dwight D. Eisenhower and his advisors counseled more deliberate measures. Several months of debate produced agreement that a new federal agency was needed to conduct all nonmilitary activity in space.
On
July 29,
1958, President Eisenhower signed the
National Aeronautics and Space Act establishing the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). When it began operations on
October 1,
1958, NASA consisted mainly of the four laboratories and some 8,000 employees of the government's 46-year-old research agency for aeronautics, the
National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), though the probably most important contribution actually had its roots in the
Germany German rocket program led by
Wernher von Braun,who is today regarded as the father of the United States space program. Elements of the
Army Ballistic Missile Agency (of which von Braun's team was a part) and the
U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Naval Research Laboratory were incorporated into NASA.
NASA's early programs were research into human spaceflight, and were conducted under the pressure of the competition between the USA and the
USSR (the
Space Race) that existed during the
Cold War. The
Mercury program, initiated in 1958, started NASA down the path of human space exploration with missions designed to discover simply if man could survive in
outer space space. Representatives from the U.S. Army (M.L. Raines, LTC, USA), Navy (P.L. Havenstein, CDR, USN) and Air Force (K.G. Lindell, COL, USAF) were selected/requested to provide assistance to the NASA Space Task Group through coordination with the existing U.S. military research and defense contracting infrastructure, and technical assistance resulting from experimental aircraft (and the associated military test pilot pool) development in the 1950s. On
May 5,
1961, astronaut
Alan B. Shepard Jr. became the first American in space when he piloted
Mercury 3 ''Freedom 7'' on a 15-minute suborbital flight.
John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth on
February 20,
1962 during the 5-hour flight of
Mercury Atlas 6 ''Friendship 7''.
Once the Mercury project proved that human spaceflight was possible,
project Gemini was launched to conduct experiments and work out issues relating to a moon mission. The first Gemini flight with astronauts on board,
Gemini 3 Gemini III, was flown by
Virgil I. Grissom Virgil "Gus" Grissom and
John W. Young on
March 23,
1965. Nine other missions followed, showing that long-duration human space flight was possible, proving that rendezvous and docking with another vehicle in space was possible, and gathering medical data on the effects of weightlessness on humans.
Apollo program
{{main|Project Apollo}}
Following the success of the Mercury and Gemini programs, the
Apollo program was launched to try to do interesting work in space and possibly put men around (but not on) the
Moon. The direction of the Apollo program was radically altered following President
John F. Kennedy's announcement on
May 25,
1961 that the
United States should commit itself to "landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the
Earth" by 1970. Thus Apollo became a program to land men on the Moon. The
Gemini program was started shortly thereafter to provide an interim spacecraft to prove techniques needed for the now much more complicated Apollo missions.
Image:Aldrin Apollo 11.jpg Buzz_Aldrin.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|175px|left|[[Buzz Aldrin walks on the surface of the Moon during ''
Apollo 11''..html" title="Meaning of 175px|left|[[Buzz Aldrin">thumb|175px|left|[[Buzz Aldrin walks on the surface of the Moon during ''
Apollo 11''.">175px|left|[[Buzz Aldrin">thumb|175px|left|[[Buzz Aldrin walks on the surface of the Moon during ''
Apollo 11''.
After eight years of preliminary missions, including NASA's first loss of astronauts with the
Apollo 1 launch pad fire, and the first spacecraft to orbit the Moon (
Apollo 8) at the end of 1968, the Apollo program achieved its goals with ''
Apollo 11'' which landed
Neil Armstrong and
Buzz Aldrin on the moon's surface on
July 20,
1969 and returned them to Earth safely on
July 24. Armstrong's first words upon stepping out of the
Apollo Lunar Module ''Eagle'' lander captured the momentousness of the occasion: "That's one small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind". Twelve men would
list of lunar astronauts set foot on the Moon by the end of the Apollo program in December 1972.
NASA had won the moon race, and in some senses this left it without direction, or at the very least without the public attention and interest that was necessary to guarantee large budgets from Congress. After President
Lyndon Johnson left office, NASA lost its main political supporter, and rocket scientist
Wernher von Braun was moved to a position lobbying in Washington. Plans for ambitious follow-on projects to construct a space station, establish a lunar base and launch a human mission to
Mars by 1990 were proposed but with the end to procurement of
Saturn rocket Saturn and Apollo hardware, there was no capability to support these. The near-disaster of
Apollo 13, where an oxygen tank explosion nearly doomed all three astronauts, helped to recapture national attention and concern. Although missions up to
Apollo 20 were planned,
Apollo 17 was the last mission to fly men to the moon. The program ended because of budget cuts (in part due to the
Vietnam War) and the desire to develop a reusable space vehicle.
Other early missions
Although the vast majority of NASA's budget has been spent on human spaceflight, there have been many robotic missions instigated by the space agency. In 1962 the
Mariner 2 mission was launched and became the first spacecraft to make a flyby of another planet – in this case
Venus (planet) Venus. The
Ranger program Ranger,
Surveyor program Surveyor, and
Lunar Orbiter missions were essential to assessing lunar conditions before attempting Apollo landings with humans on board. Later, the two
Viking program Viking probes landed on the surface of
Mars (planet) Mars and sent color images back to Earth, but perhaps more impressive were the
Pioneer program Pioneer and particularly
Voyager program Voyager missions that visited
Jupiter (planet) Jupiter,
Saturn (planet) Saturn,
Uranus (planet) Uranus and
Neptune (planet) Neptune sending back scientific information and color images.
Having lost the moon race, the
Soviet Union had, along with the USA, changed its approach. On
July 17,
1975 an Apollo craft (finding a new use after the
cancelled Apollo missions cancelling of planned lunar flights) was docked to the Soviet Soyuz 19 spacecraft, in the
Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. Although the Cold War would last many more years, this was a critical point in NASA's history and much of the international co-operation in space exploration that exists today has its genesis with this mission. America's first space station,
Skylab, occupied NASA from the end of Apollo until the late 1970s.
Shuttle era
Image:Shuttle.jpg Space_Shuttle Columbia.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|175px|right|[[Space Shuttle Columbia,
April 12 1981 .html" title="Meaning of 175px|right|[[Space Shuttle Columbia">thumb|175px|right|[[Space Shuttle Columbia,
April 12 1981 ">175px|right|[[Space Shuttle Columbia">thumb|175px|right|[[Space Shuttle Columbia,
April 12 1981
The
space shuttle became the major focus of NASA in the late 1970s and the 1980s. Planned to be a frequently launchable and mostly reusable vehicle, four space shuttles were built by 1985. The first to launch,
Space Shuttle Columbia ''Columbia'' did so on
April 12,
1981.
The shuttle was not all good news for NASA — flights were much more expensive than initially projected, and even after the 1986
STS-51-L ''Challenger'' disaster highlighted the risks of space flight, the public again lost interest as missions appeared to become mundane. Work began on
Space Station Freedom as a focus for the manned space programme but within NASA there was argument that these projects came at the expense of more inspiring unmanned missions such as the
Voyager program Voyager probes. The Challenger disaster aside the late 1980s marked a low point for NASA.
Nonetheless, the shuttle has been used to launch milestone projects like the
Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The HST was created with a relatively small budget of $2 billion but has continued operation since 1990 and has delighted both scientists and the public. Some of the images it has returned have become near-legendary, such as the groundbreaking
Hubble Deep Field images. The HST is a joint project between
European Space Agency ESA and NASA, and its success has paved the way for greater collaboration between the agencies.
In 1995 Russian-American interaction would again be achieved as the Shuttle-
Mir missions began, and once more a Russian craft (this time a full-fledged space station) docked with an American vehicle. This cooperation continues to the present day, with Russia and America the two biggest partners in the largest space station ever built – the
International Space Station (ISS). The strength of their cooperation on this project was even more evident when NASA began relying on Russian launch vehicles to service the ISS following the 2003
Space Shuttle Columbia disaster ''Columbia'' disaster, which grounded the shuttle fleet for well over two years.
Costing over one hundred billion dollars, it has been difficult at times for NASA to justify the ISS. The
population at large have historically been hard to impress with details of scientific experiments in space, preferring news of grand projects to exotic locations. Even now, the ISS cannot accommodate as many scientists as planned.
During much of the 1990s, NASA was faced with shrinking annual budgets due to Congressional belt-tightening in Washington, DC. In response, NASA's ninth administrator,
Daniel S. Goldin, pioneered the "faster, better, cheaper" approach that enabled NASA to cut costs while still delivering a wide variety of aerospace programs (
Discovery Program). That method was criticized and re-evaluated following the twin losses of
Mars Climate Orbiter and
Mars Polar Lander in 1999.
NASA's shuttle program has made over 112 successful launches.
NASA's future
Image:NASA launch vehicle comparison.jpg Saturn V.html" title="Meaning of right right|thumb|200px|Left to Right: [[Saturn V, which last carried men to the moon, the
Space Shuttle and the planned crew and heavy lift launch vehicles.html" title="Meaning of thumb|200px|Left to Right: [[Saturn V">right|thumb|200px|Left to Right: [[Saturn V, which last carried men to the moon, the
Space Shuttle and the planned crew and heavy lift launch vehicles">thumb|200px|Left to Right: [[Saturn V">right|thumb|200px|Left to Right: [[Saturn V, which last carried men to the moon, the
Space Shuttle and the planned crew and heavy lift launch vehicles
NASA's most publicly-inspiring mission of recent years has probably been the
Mars Pathfinder mission of 1997. Newspapers around the world carried images of the lander dispatching its own rover, Sojourner, to explore the surface of Mars in a way never done before at any extra-terrestrial location. Less publicly acclaimed but performing science from 1997 to date (
as of 2005 2005) has been the
Mars Global Surveyor orbiter. Since 2001, the orbiting
Mars Odyssey has been searching for evidence of past or present water and volcanic activity on the red planet. NASA expects to continue exploring the Red Planet with more spacecraft such as the
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which reached Mars in 2006.
The Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003, which killed the crew of six Americans and one Israeli, caused a 29-month hiatus in space shuttle flights and triggered a serious re-examination of NASA's priorities. The U.S. government, various scientists, and the public all considered the future of the space program.
On
January 14,
2004, ten days after the landing of
Mars Exploration Rover Mission Mars Exploration Rover ''
MER-A Spirit'', President
George W. Bush announced a new plan for NASA's future, dubbed the
Vision for Space Exploration. According to this plan, humankind will return to the moon by 2020, and set up outposts as a testbed and potential resource for future missions. The
space shuttle will be retired in 2010 and the
Crew Exploration Vehicle will replace it by 2014, capable of both docking with the ISS and leaving the Earth's orbit. The future of the ISS is somewhat uncertain — construction will be completed, but beyond that is less clear. Although the plan initially met with skepticism from Congress, in late 2004 Congress agreed to provide start-up funds for the first year's worth of the new space vision.
Hoping to spur innovation from the private sector, NASA established a series of
Centennial Challenges, technology prizes for non-government teams, in 2004. The Challenges include tasks that will be useful for implementing the Vision for Space Exploration, such as building more efficient astronaut gloves.
Criticisms
Some commentators, such as Mark Wade, note that NASA has suffered from a 'stop-start' approach to its human spaceflight programs. The Apollo spacecraft and Saturn family of launch vehicles were abandoned in 1970 after billions of dollars had been spent on their development. In 2004 the U.S. Government proposed eventually replacing the Shuttle with a
Crew Exploration Vehicle that would allow the agency to again send astronauts to the Moon. Despite the reduction of its budget following project Apollo, NASA has maintained a top-heavy bureaucracy resulting in inflated costs and compromised hardware.
image:nasa.florida.750pix.jpg Florida.html"_title="Meaning of thumb thumb|250px|right|[[Florida,_USA, taken from NASA Shuttle Mission
STS-95 on
October 31,
1998..html" title="Meaning of 250px|right|[[Florida">thumb|250px|right|[[Florida, USA, taken from NASA Shuttle Mission
STS-95 on
October 31,
1998.">250px|right|[[Florida">thumb|250px|right|[[Florida, USA, taken from NASA Shuttle Mission
STS-95 on
October 31,
1998.
Currently, the
International Space Station ISS relies on the Shuttle fleet for all major construction shipments.
The Shuttle fleet has lost two spacecraft and fourteen astronauts in two disasters in 1986 and 2003.
While the 1986 loss was made up with a
Space Shuttle Endeavour space shuttle built from replacement parts, NASA does not plan to build another shuttle to replace the second loss. (See also
Crew Exploration Vehicle CEV.)
The ISS, which was intended to have a crew of seven
as of 2005, now has a skeleton crew of two, causing many intended research projects to be delayed. However, Anatoli Perminov, director of Roskosmos, told Russian news agency Itar-Tas that from 2009 there would be six permanent crew members on board the station. Since the
Columbia Shuttle accident, the permanent space station crew has comprised one Russian and one American, on board for six months at a time, meaning European and Japanese astronauts could not stay for longer missions. An increase in the number of crew members has been in the pipeline for some time but was delayed following the Columbia disaster in February 2003.
Other nations that have invested heavily in the space station's construction, such as the members of the
European Space Agency, are fearful that the ISS's fate will soon match the
Skylab#End of Skylab fate of Skylab.
NASA spaceflight missions
Human spaceflight
*
Mercury program
*
Gemini program
*
Apollo program
*
Apollo-Soyuz (
Soviet Union partenership)
*
Skylab
*
Space Shuttle
*
Shuttle-Mir Program (
Russian Federal Space Agency Russian partnership)
*
International Space Station (working together with
Russian Federal Space Agency Russia,
Canadian Space Agency Canada,
ESA, and
JAXA along with co-cooperaters,
Italian Space Agency ASI and
Brazilian Space Agency Brazil)
*
Crew Exploration Vehicle Project Constellation
Robotic space missions
*
Earth Observing System Earth Observing
**
Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite
**
TIMED (Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energetics and Dynamics)
*Lunar missions
**
Ranger program Ranger
**
Surveyor program Surveyor
**
Lunar Orbiter program Lunar Orbiter
**
Clementine mission Clementine
**
Lunar Prospector
**
Moon Mineralogy Mapper (NASA instrument for
Indian Space Research Organization ISRO's Chandraayan-1 spacecraft planned for 2007)
**
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (Planned for 2008)
*Mercury missions
**
Mariner 10
**
MESSENGER
*Venus missions
**
Mariner program Mariner 2, 5 and 10
**
Pioneer Venus project Pioneer Venus
**
Magellan probe Magellan
*
exploration of Mars Mars missions
**
Mariner program Mariner 4, 6, 7 and 9
**
Viking program Viking 1 and 2
**
Mars Observer
**
Mars Pathfinder
**
Mars Climate Orbiter
**
Mars Polar Lander
**
Mars Global Surveyor
**
2001 Mars Odyssey
**
Mars Exploration Rover Mission Mars Exploration Rovers
**
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
**
Phoenix (spacecraft) Phoenix Lander (Planned for 2007)
**
Mars Science Laboratory (Planned for 2009)
**
Mars 2011 (Planned for 2011)
**
Astrobiology Field Laboratory (Planned for 2016)
**
Mars Return Sample Mission ESA partnership (Planned for 2016-2024)
*Jupiter missions
**
Pioneer 10
**
Galileo probe Galileo
**
Juno spacecraft Juno (Planned for 2010)
*Saturn missions
**
Cassini-Huygens together with
ESA
*Neptune missions
**
Neptune Orbiter (Planned for 2016)
*Pluto missions
**
New Horizons
*Multi-planet missions
**
Pioneer 11 – Jupiter and Saturn
**
Mariner 10 – Venus and Mercury
**
Voyager 1 – Jupiter and Saturn
**
Voyager 2 – Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune
*Asteroidal/cometary missions
**
NEAR Shoemaker
**
Deep Space 1
**
Stardust (spacecraft) Stardust
**
Deep Impact (space mission) Deep Impact
**
Dawn Mission Dawn (Planned for 2007)
*Canceled planetary-asteroid missions
**
Mars Telecommunications Orbiter (cancelled)
**
Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter JIMO (cancelled)
**
CRAF (cancelled)
**
NetLander (cancelled)
**
Pluto Kuiper Express (cancelled;
New Horizons is replacement)
*Proposed planetary-asteroid missions
**
Glory (spacecraft) Glory (proposed)
*Sun observing missions
**
Solar and Heliospheric Observatory SOHO –
European Space Agency ESA partnership
**
Ulysses (spacecraft) Ulysses –
European Space Agency ESA partnership
**
STEREO (Planned for 2006)
* Great Observatories for Space Astrophysics
**
Hubble Space Telescope –
ESA partnership
**
Compton Gamma Ray Observatory
**
Chandra X-ray Observatory
**
Spitzer Space Telescope (formerly known as the Space Infrared Telescope Facility, SIRTF)
*Other
space observatory observatories
**
Cosmic Background Explorer COBE
**
Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer FUSE
**
IRAS Infrared Astronomical Satellite
**
James Webb Space Telescope –
ESA partnership (Planned for 2013)
**
WMAP
List of NASA administrators
#
T. Keith Glennan (1958–1961)
#
James E. Webb (1961–1968)
#
Thomas O. Paine (1969–1970)
#
James C. Fletcher (1971–1977)
#
Robert A. Frosch (1977–1981)
#
James M. Beggs (1981–1985)
#
James C. Fletcher (1986–1989)
#
Richard H. Truly (1989–1992)
#
Daniel S. Goldin (1992–2001)
#
Sean O'Keefe (2001–2005)
#
Michael D. Griffin (2005–)
Field installations
NASA's headquarters are located in Washington, DC.
NASA has field and research installations at (by type); some facilities have more than one mission assigned to them due to historical or administrative reasons.
Research Centres
*
Goddard Institute for Space Studies,
New York, New York
*
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, near
Pasadena, California
*
Langley Research Center,
Hampton, Virginia
Test Facilities
*
Ames Research Center,
Moffett Field, California
*
Dryden Flight Research Center,
Edwards, California
*
Glenn Research Center John H. Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field,
Cleveland, Ohio
*
Goddard Space Flight Center,
Greenbelt, Maryland
*
Independent Verification and Validation Facility,
Fairmont, West Virginia
*
Langley Research Center,
Hampton, Virginia
*
Wallops Flight Facility,
Wallops Island, Virginia
Construction & Launch Facilities
*
George C. Marshall Space Flight Center,
Huntsville, Alabama
*
John F. Kennedy Space Center,
Florida
*
Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center,
Houston, Texas
*
Michoud Assembly Facility,
New Orleans, Louisiana
*
White Sands Test Facility,
Las Cruces, New Mexico
Deep Space Network
Deep Space Network (DSN) stations
#
Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex,
Barstow, California
#
Madrid Deep Space Communication Complex,
Madrid,
Spain
#
Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex,
Canberra,
Australian Capital Territory
There is a
BOINC distributed computing project called "DSN @ Home" [http://hireme.geek.nz/dsn-at-home.html] that hopes to use DSN facilities to improve communication with craft in the
Voyager program.
Tourism & Museum Facilities
*
Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex,
Canberra,
Australian Capital Territory
*
John C. Stennis Space Center,
Bay St. Louis, Mississippi
*
John F. Kennedy Space Center,
Florida
*
Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center,
Houston, Texas
Awards and decorations
NASA presently bestows a number of medals and decorations to astronauts and other NASA personnel. Some awards are authorized for wear on active duty military uniforms. Current NASA awards are as follows:
*
Congressional Space Medal of Honor
*
NASA Distinguished Service Medal and
NASA Distinguished Service Medal#NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal
*
NASA Equal Employment Opportunity Medal
*
NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal
*
NASA Exceptional Administrative Achievement Medal
*
NASA Exceptional Bravery Medal
*
NASA Exceptional Engineering Achievement Medal
*
NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal
*
NASA Exceptional Service Medal
*
NASA Exceptional Technological Achievement Medal
*
NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal
*
NASA Public Service Medal
*
NASA Space Flight Medal
Related legislation
* 1958 – National Aeronautics and Space Administration PL 85-568 (passed on
July 29)
* 1961 –
Apollo mission funding PL 87-98 A
* 1970 – National Aeronautics and Space Administration Research and Development Act PL 91-119
* 1984 – National Aeronautics and Space Administration Authorization Act PL 98-361
* 1988 – National Aeronautics and Space Administration Authorization Act PL 100-685
*
NASA Budget 1958–2005 in 1996 Constant Year Dollars
See also
*
List of aerospace engineering topics
*
Astronaut
*
Small Aircraft Transportation System
*
Space Shuttle
*
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
*
Space exploration
*
Space race
*
Robert Gilruth,
Chris Kraft,
Gene Kranz (flight directors)
*
Weightlessness#NASA's KC-135 Reduced Gravity Aircraft KC-135 Reduced Gravity Aircraft
*
Shirley Thomas (USC professor) Shirley Thomas
*
Stewart Brand
*
Astronomy Picture of the Day
*
Vision for Space Exploration
* Asteroid
11365 NASA is named after the organization.
Other space agencies
*
Canadian Space Agency
*
CNES CNES (Centre National d'Études Spatiales)
*
China National Space Administration
*
European Space Agency
*
German Aerospace Center German Space Agency
*
Italian Space Agency
*
Indian Space Research Organisation
*
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
*
National Space Agency of Ukraine
*
Russian Federal Space Agency
*
Soviet space program (historical)
External links
{{Commons|NASA}}
General
-
NASA Home Page
-
NASA Watch
* {{gutenberg author|id=NASA|name=NASA}}
-
NASA Podcast
Further research
-
NASA History Series Publications
-
NASA Historical Data Books (SP-4012)
-
Read Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding NASA
-
Research in NASA History: A Guide to the NASA History Program (large PDF – over 1,012 kb)
-
NTRS: NASA Technical Reports Server
-
Eventscope
-
NASA for Kids
-
Virtual Tour of the Air and Space Museum
{{National space programmes}}
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''See also:''
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