NASA orbiter offers images of moon landing sites

July 18, 2009 by NetCrunch  
Filed under In Focus, Space

apollo landing sites With the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing just two days away, NASA on Friday released the sharpest images ever taken of astronaut work sites on the moon, showing hardware and soil disturbances left behind by the 12 Americans who visited the lunar surface between 1969 and 1972.
The images, taken over the last few weeks by cameras aboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, include some of the 10-foot-tall landing structure called the descent stage. It was left behind when the astronauts returned home and is seen casting long shadows over the pale surface of the moon.

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Atlantis ready to return to Earth

May 22, 2009 by NetCrunch  
Filed under Headline, Space

Atlantis return

Astronauts aboard space shuttle Atlantis are preparing to return to Earth after an ambitious and risky mission to re-fit the Hubble telescope.

There are two chances to land on Friday: one at 1500 BST (1000 EDT) and a second at 1639 BST (1139 EDT).

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Hubble analyzer fixed, but not without headaches

May 17, 2009 by NetCrunch  
Filed under Headline, Space

hubble repair

On a marathon spacewalk Sunday, two astronauts overcame repeated obstacles to make the second of two historic repairs to the Hubble Space Telescope.

One bolt that had to be extracted proved so stubborn that astronaut Michael Massimino resorted to brute force to rip it out of the telescope.

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In space, Europe gets ahead of U.S.

May 10, 2009 by NetCrunch  
Filed under Space

The world’s astronomers are about to get a trio of powerful new eyes on the sky that can see better and farther than existing space telescopes.

As a result, Europe will hold a scientific and technological lead over the United States in some key areas of cosmology, at least for a while.

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Former Microsoft Executive returns from Space

April 9, 2009 by NetCrunch  
Filed under Headline, Space

Charles Simonyi

A former Microsoft Corp. executive Charles Simonyi has safely returned from his 12-day “vacation” on the International Space Stati, It was the last trip on which nonastronauts could hitch a ride on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft.

Simonyi blasted off March 26 from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan with two crew members, Russian cosmonaut Gennadiy Padalka and American astronaut Michael Barratt. He took the only route available to space tourists: making a reservation for the Soyuz through US-based Space Adventures Ltd.

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