

NASA's SpaceX Crew-11 Suit-Up and Walkout (SCRUB)
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NASA's SpaceX Crew-11 Suit-Up and Walkout
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SpaceX Crew-2 Prelaunch News Conference
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SpaceX Crew-2 Prelaunch News Conference
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SpaceX Crew-2 Prelaunch News Conference
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SpaceX Crew-2 Prelaunch News Conference
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SpaceX Demo-1 Prelaunch News Conference
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NP-2023-04-019-JSC-Gateway-Expanded-View-041423
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NASA Hosts Post-Flight Readiness Review Briefing for the agency
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SpaceX Demo-2 Astronaut Suit-Up
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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- KSC management and other employees gather in the Center’s television studio to watch the address by President George W. Bush at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C., stating his goals for NASA’s new mission: Completing the International Space Station, retiring the Space Shuttle orbiters, developing a new crew exploration vehicle, and returning to the moon and beyond within the next two decades. Pres. Bush was welcomed by NASA Administrator Sean O’Keefe and Expedition 8 Commander Michael Foale, who greeted him from the International Space Station. Members of the Washington, D.C., audience included astronauts Eileen Collins, Ed Lu and Michael Lopez-Alegria, and former astronaut Gene Cernan.
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Boeing Crew Flight Test NASA Social Panel
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SpaceX Crew-1 Liftoff
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SpaceX Crew-1 Liftoff
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NASA’s SpaceX Crew-4 Live Launch Coverage
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NASA’s SpaceX Crew-4 Live Launch Coverage
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The world's largest parafoil slowly deflates after carrying the X-38, V-131R, to a safe landing
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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - Workers in the Space Station Processing Facility check out the Window Observational Research Facility (WORF), designed and built by the Boeing Co. at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. WORF will be delivered to the International Space Station and placed in the rack position in front of the Destiny lab window, providing locations for attaching cameras, multi-spectral scanners and other instruments. WORF will support a variety of scientific and commercial experiments in areas of Earth systems and processes, global ecological changes in Earth’s biosphere, lithosphere, hydrosphere and climate system, Earth resources, natural hazards, and education. After installation, it will become a permanent focal point for Earth Science research aboard the space station.
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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - Workers in the Space Station Processing Facility check out the Window Observational Research Facility (WORF), designed and built by the Boeing Co. at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. WORF will be delivered to the International Space Station and placed in the rack position in front of the Destiny lab window, providing locations for attaching cameras, multi-spectral scanners and other instruments. WORF will support a variety of scientific and commercial experiments in areas of Earth systems and processes, global ecological changes in Earth’s biosphere, lithosphere, hydrosphere and climate system, Earth resources, natural hazards, and education. After installation, it will become a permanent focal point for Earth Science research aboard the space station.
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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - In the Space Station Processing Facility, the U.S. Node 2 (center) and the Japanese Experiment Module (JEM), background right, await a Multi-Element Integrated Test (MEIT). Node 2 attaches to the end of the U.S. Lab on the International Space Station and provides attach locations for the Japanese laboratory, European laboratory, the Centrifuge Accommodation Module and, eventually, Multipurpose Logistics Modules. It will provide the primary docking location for the Shuttle when a pressurized mating adapter is attached to Node 2. Installation of the module will complete the U.S. Core of the ISS. The National Space Development Agency of Japan (NASDA) developed their laboratory at the Tsukuba Space Center near Tokyo. It is the first element, named "Kibo" (Hope), to be delivered to KSC. The JEM is Japan's primary contribution to the Station. It will enhance the unique research capabilities of the orbiting complex by providing an additional environment for astronauts to conduct science experiments.
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CCP Boeing OFT ULA Post Launch News Conference
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CCP Boeing OFT ULA Live Launch Broadcast
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CCP Boeing OFT ULA Live Launch Broadcast
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Mir space station as seen from STS-63 Discovery
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