TIMELAPSE of Future Space Stations
What happens when humanity begins living in space, building larger space stations, and creating a purely space based economy. Space drones will deliver goods between stations, farming stations will grow food, and space hotels will host celestial events and viewing parties for eclipses and welcoming parties for spaceships returning from Mars.
This sci-fi documentary takes a look at the future of space stations and space technology, starting with the retiring of the International Space Station, and ending with the construction of the largest rotating ring world space station, with its own atmosphere and lakes that evaporate creating clouds and rain.
Other topics in this video include: stealth based technology and metamaterials, the future of Starship Mark 2, cryo refuelling in space, Moon space stations, the Mars Colony, asteroid mining station, future space telescope stations, design concepts, and cryo sleep,
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PATREON
The short video "Interstellar A.I.: Writing the Encyclopedia of the Galaxy" is available on my Patreon.
Along with the first and second volumes of 'The Encyclopedia of the Future'.
Visit my Patreon here: / venturecity
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Credit: Venture City
Created by: Jacob B
Narration by: Alexander Masters
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Other Earths The Search for Habitable Planets 4k
Our galaxy is made up of some four hundred billion stars and at least a hundred billion planets. How many are like Earth, with an atmosphere, flowing water, complex geology, and abundant life? Astronomers are seeking answers in countless photons racing past the Earth and in bold new theories about how planets form and evolve. What they are finding has only sharpened one of the oldest debates in science: Is biology a powerful and inevitable byproduct of cosmic evolution? Or is it rare, in a galaxy shaped by violence and mayhem?
Credit: NASA
Credit: SpaceRip
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Apollo 17 The Last Lunar Mission Full Apollo Mission
Between the years 1968 and 1972, NASA sent 24 men to the moon. The final mission, Apollo 17, flew in December 1972 and closed the final chapter in NASA's triumphant Apollo Program. This documentary gives unparalleled access to those vital mission moments, taking us on the journey of a lifetime - for the last time.
The End Of The Apollo Program | The Apollo Experience: Apollo 17 - Part 2
#apollomission #apollospacemission #nasa
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NASA's SpaceX DM 2 Mission Highlights 2
The SpaceX Demo-2 test flight for NASA's Commercial Crew Program was the first to deliver astronauts to the International Space Station and return them safely to Earth onboard a commercially built and operated spacecraft.
The crew launched on Saturday, May 30 on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida and arrived at the orbiting laboratory on May 31. The SpaceX Crew Dragon “Endeavour” splashed down off the coast of Pensacola, Florida, Sunday, Aug. 2 at 2:48 pm EDT following their undocking from the International Space Station Saturday, Aug. 1 at 7:35 pm EDT.
During their 62 days aboard station, Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley contributed more than 100 hours of time to supporting the orbiting laboratory’s investigations, participated in public engagement events, and supported four spacewalks with Behnken and Cassidy to install new batteries in the station’s power grid and upgrade other station hardware.
These activities are a part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, which has been working with the U.S. aerospace industry to launch astronauts on American rockets and spacecraft from American soil the International Space Station for the first time since 2011. This is SpaceX’s final test flight and is providing data about the performance of the Falcon 9 rocket, Crew Dragon spacecraft and ground systems, as well as in-orbit, docking, splashdown and recovery operations.
The test flight also will help NASA certify SpaceX’s crew transportation system for regular flights carrying astronauts to and from the space station. SpaceX is readying the hardware for the first rotational mission that will occur following NASA certification, which is expected to take about six weeks.
The goal of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program is safe, reliable and cost-effective transportation to and from the International Space Station. This could allow for additional research time and increase the opportunity for discovery aboard humanity’s testbed for exploration, including helping us prepare for human exploration of the Moon and Mars.
Credit: NASA
Credit: NASA VIDEO
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NASA's Northrop Grumman 20th Cygnus Release from Space Station
A Cygnus cargo spacecraft supporting Northrop Grumman’s 20th commercial resupply services mission for NASA was released from the International Space Station’s robotic arm at 6:01 a.m. Central July 12. The spacecraft launched January 30 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida and went on to deliver more than 8,200 pounds of cargo to the space station after its arrival on Feb. 1. The spacecraft will undergo a fiery reentry into Earth’s atmosphere, eliminating more than 7,300 pounds of disposable waste. This leaves a spot available at the Earth-facing port of the space station’s Unity module that will be occupied by another Cygnus in August.
Join NASA as we go forward to the Moon and on to Mars -- discover the latest on Earth, the Solar System and beyond with a weekly update in your inbox.
Credit: NASA
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Blastoff! SpaceX Falcon Heavy launches GOES U weather satellite, nails landings
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched NOAA's GOES-U satellite from Kennedy Space Center in Florida on June 25, 2024. Full Story: https://www.space.com/spacex-falcon-h...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) GOES-R series constellation is expected to be complete with the GOES-U satellite.
The mission is historic for many reasons, including the fact it will mark the first time a NOAA satellite will be transported to space using a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket.
Credit; NASA
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Total Solar Eclipse 2024 Through the Eyes of NASA Official Broadcast
Watch live with us as a total solar eclipse moves across North America on April 8, 2024, traveling through Mexico, across the United States from Texas to Maine, and out across Canada’s Atlantic coast.
A total solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between the Sun and the Earth, completely blocking the face of the Sun. The sky will darken as if it were dawn or dusk.
From 1 to 4 p.m. EDT (1700 to 2000 UTC) on April 8, we’ll share conversations with experts and provide telescope views of the eclipse from several sites along the eclipse path. Throughout the broadcast, send us your questions in the chat using #askNASA for a chance to have them answered live.
WARNING: Except during the brief total phase of a total solar eclipse, when the Moon completely blocks the Sun’s bright face, it is not safe to look directly at the Sun without specialized eye protection for solar viewing. Indirect viewing methods, such as pinhole projectors, can also be used to experience an eclipse. For more on how to safely view this eclipse: https://go.nasa.gov/Eclipse2024Safety
Review our eclipse safety guidelines: https://go.nasa.gov/Eclipse2024Safety
Learn more about the total solar eclipse: https://go.nasa.gov/Eclipse2024
Track the eclipse path: https://go.nasa.gov/eclipseexplorer
Credit: NASA
#NASA #Eclipse #TotalSolarEclipse
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Soyuz MS 18 Undocking from International Space Station
Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy of Roscosmos and Russian spaceflight participants Yulia Peresild and Klim Shipenko undocked from the International Space Station’s Nauka Multipurpose Laboratory Module in their Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft October 16, returning to Earth a few hours later for a parachute-assisted landing on the steppe of Kazakhstan Oct. 17. Peresild, a Russian actress and Shipenko, her producer-director, spent 12 days on the station filming scenes for a movie title “Challenge” under an arrangement between Roscosmos and Moscow-based media entities. Novitskiy returned after spending 191 days in space on a flight which spanned almost 81 million miles. Novitskiy has now logged 531 days in space on his three missions.
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Russian cargo ship launches to space station
Russia's Progress 88 freighter launched atop a Soyuz rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on May 30, 2024 at 5:43 a.m. EDT (0943 GMT; 2:43 p.m. local time at Baikonur).
Progress 88 is packed with about 3 tons of food, propellant, and other supplies for the astronauts living aboard the International Space Station (ISS), according to Space.com.
Credit: NASA / Roscosmos
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How Saturn Got Its Rings The Planets
There's evidence to suggest Saturn didn't have its rings when the dinosaurs inhabited Earth, so how did they form?
Best of Earth Science: http://bit.ly/EarthLabOriginals
Best of BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/TheBestOfBBCEarthVideos
The Planets (2019)
This stunningly ambitious series brings to life the most memorable events in the history of the solar system, by using ground-breaking visual effects to tell the thrilling story of all eight planets. Transporting you to the surface of these dynamic worlds to witness the moments of high drama that shaped each one, The Planets reveals how the latest science allows us to unlock their past lives. It pieces together clues of magnificent lost waterfalls on Mars, the mass planetary migrations as they jostled for position early in their history, and even the distant fate of Saturn as one of its moons awakens to form a beautiful water world.
This is a channel from BBC Studios who help fund new BBC programmes. Service information and feedback: http://bbcworldwide.com/vod-feedback-...
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LIFE BEYOND Visions of Alien Life Full Documentary 4K
4K download for uncompressed viewing experience: https://melodysheep.gumroad.com/l/lif... Are we alone? What might alien species look like? And what could we learn from them? Proudly presenting Life Beyond Remastered, a film that weaves all 3 episodes of the series together with new content and updated visuals & audio into a feature-length experience.
Massive thank you to everyone who made this possible: my subscribers, patreon members, vfx collaborators, scientists, researchers, friends, family, and more. A special thank you to Protocol Labs for their sponsorship of the series and support, please check out the work they are doing: http://protocol.ai
Please watch in 4K with your best audio equipment for the proper experience! High quality 4K download is now available here: https://melodysheep.gumroad.com/l/lif...
Directed by Melodysheep (John D. Boswell)
Narrated by Will Crowley
Story, music, sound, and editing by John D. Boswell
Featuring voices of: Douglas Rain, David Christian, Michelle Thaller, Andrew Siemion, Dan Werthimer, Avi Loeb, Ellen Stofan, David Kipping, Nick Lane, Jonathan Losos, Caleb Scharf, Jack Cohen, Shawn Domagal-Goldman, Jill Tarter, and Orson Wells
Additional Visual Effects by: Unknown Dino, Julius Horsthuis, Lynn Huberty, Tim Stupak, Samuel Krug, Eren Arik, CGHadi, Jack Emmens, Konstantin Kovalenko, Eren Arik, NASA, Evolve, Adrian Bobb, Igor Puskaric, Unknown Dino, and Alan Reynaud
Supported by Morrison Waud, Angela Kilic-Cave, James Upsher, Matthew Brown, TabloidA, and Juan Benet
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Instagram: @melodysheep_
Twitter: @musicalscience
Special thanks to my $50+ Patrons:
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Credit: Melody Sheep
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Flight Around a Black Hole by NASA
This new, immersive visualization produced on a NASA supercomputer represents a scenario where a camera — a stand-in for a daring astronaut — just misses the event horizon and slingshots back out.
Goddard scientists created the visualizations on the Discover supercomputer at the NASA Center for Climate Simulation.
The destination is a supermassive black hole with 4.3 million times the mass of our Sun, equivalent to the monster located at the center of our Milky Way galaxy. To simplify the complex calculations, the black hole is not rotating.
A flat, swirling cloud of hot, glowing gas called an accretion disk surrounds the black hole and serves as a visual reference during the fall. So do glowing structures called photon rings, which form closer to the black hole from light that has orbited it one or more times. A backdrop of the starry sky as seen from Earth completes the scene.
The project generated about 10 terabytes of data — equivalent to roughly half of the estimated text content in the Library of Congress — and took about 5 days running on just 0.3% of Discover’s 129,000 processors. The same feat would take more than a decade on a typical laptop.
Read more: https://science.nasa.gov/supermassive...
Music credit: "Beautiful Awesome,” David Husband and James William Banbury [PRS], Universal Production Music
“Awakening Yearning,” David Ashok Ramani and Jonathan Elias [ASCAP], Universal Production Music
“Dawning,” Lorenzo Castellarin [BMI], Universal Production Music
Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center /J. Schnittman and B. Powell
Producer: Scott Wiessinger (KBR Wyle Services, LLC)
Visualizer:Jeremy Schnittman (NASA/GSFC)
Science writer: Francis Reddy (University of Maryland College Park)
Computer support: Brian Powell (NASA/GSFC)
Editor: Scott Wiessinger (KBR Wyle Services, LLC)
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Mars-Life on the Red Planet
In February 2021, the robot "Perseverance" landed successfully on Mars. However, this success was never a given. The film shows the difficult work involved in developing the robot, right up to its successful landing.
The new robot NASA sent to Mars is called "Perseverance". Its mission? To search for evidence of past life on the Red Planet - an important and ambitious endeavor. It took years to design the space probe and its small helicopter drone, called "Ingenuity". This documentary follows the rover's development, right up to its landing in the Jezero Crater on February 18, 2021.
The mission proved to be a complete success: the robot landed safely and all the instruments on board functioned smoothly. As a result, "Perseverance" was able to deliver high-resolution images of Mars. But getting there was an arduous journey for all involved.
On site, "Perseverance" takes samples from the crater, which scientists believe was once a river delta. Geological traces of past life - so-called biosignatures - could be hidden in the rock. Eventually, these samples will be brought back to Earth for analysis. Among other things, they could provide insights into possible life on Mars.
The four-pound mini-helicopter "Ingenuity", which traveled in the belly of the rover, is now carrying out a series of test flights. These are the first of their kind to be undertaken on another planet. Another task of "Perseverance" is to test an innovative technology for extracting oxygen from the atmosphere. It is hoped that the gas can be used as fuel -- or to supply oxygen for future manned flights to Mars.
#documentary #dwdocumentary #nasa #mars
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Artemis Success and Preparation
NASA’s Orion spacecraft launched atop the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket from historic Launch Pad 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center on a path to the Moon, officially beginning the Artemis I mission.
Over the course of 25.5 days, Orion performed two lunar flybys, coming within 80 miles (129 kilometers) of the lunar surface. At its farthest distance during the mission, Orion traveled nearly 270,000 miles (435,000 kilometers) from our home planet. NASA’s Orion spacecraft successfully completed a parachute-assisted splashdown in the Pacific Ocean at 9:40 a.m. PST (12:40 p.m. EST) as the final major milestone of the Artemis I mission.
Artemis I set new records of performance, exceeded efficiency expectations, and established new safety baselines for humans in deep space. This is a prelude to what comes next—following the success of Artemis I, human beings will fly around the Moon on Artemis II.
Link to download this video:
https://images.nasa.gov/details/Succe...
Credit: NASA
Writer and Director: Paul Wizikowski
Director of Photography: Phil Sexton
Editor: Phil Sexton
Producers: Lora Bleacher and Lisa Allen
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NASA Explorers Season 6, Episode 5 Sample Return
How does it feel to watch your life's work parachute through the atmosphere? Retrieving the sample of asteroid Bennu is just the beginning of this game-changing science mission. Relive the joy and suspense of the OSIRIS-REx sample return with #NASAExplorers.
Catch up with the full season of NASA Explorers, also streaming on https://plus.nasa.gov.
Created by: James Tralie
Producers: James Tralie, Dan Gallagher, Lauren Ward, Katy Mersmann
Scientists: Dante Lauretta, Brian May
TV Hosts: James Tralie, Jim Garvin, Lauren Ward, Sophia Roberts, Shaneequa Vereen
Return Broadcast Producers: Michael Starobin, Sami Aziz
NASA Administrator: Bill Nelson
Broadcast Logistics: Micheala Sosby
Videographers: Rob Andreoli, John Philyaw, John Caldwell, Liz Wilk
Animation: Walt Feimer, Michael Lentz, Jonathan North, Adriana Manrique Gutierrez, Krystofer Kim, James Tralie, Bailee DesRocher, Jacquelyn DeMink, Lisa Poje, Jenny McElligott
Sound Design: James Tralie
Data Visualization: Kel Elkins
NASA+ Executive Producer: Rebecca Sirmons
Music provided by Universal Production Music: “Fast Motion Orchestra” by Laurent Levesque; “Triumphal” by Alan Myson; “Betrail” by Anders Paul Niska and Klas Johan Wahl; “Sunrays” by Chips Hunt, Jez Fox, and Rohan Jones; “Conquering” by Alan Myson; “Psychotic Strings” by Matthias Ullrich and Raffael Gruber; “Between Surprise and Fear” by Alan Myson; “In the Simulator” by Alan D Boyd; “Danger Zone” by Justine Emma Barker; “Major Heart” by Jennifer Lynn Jacobs and Marc Aaron Jacobs; “Launch Pad at Sunrise” by Alan D Boyd; “Rig for Red” by Andreas Bamberger, Martin Laschober, and Richard M. Lauw; “Confronting your Fears” by Benji Paul Merrison and Will Slater; “Floating Satellites” by Blair Mowat; “King of the Mountain” by Steven David Fay; “Arctic Wind” by Laetitia Pansanel-Garric; “Threatening Riser” by Benji Paul Merrison and Will Slater; “Marked for Flight” by Kavin Hoo; “New Generations” by Sergey Azbel; “Dark String Bend” by Benji Paul Merrison and Will Slater; “Glistening Heart” by Adam Saunders and Mark Stephen Cousins; “Elevation” by Alan Myson; “Shores of Eventide” by Benjamin Peter McAvoy, Stuart Dale Thomas, and William David Featherby; “Rise Up” by Alasdair Neil Parkinson; “Wilderness” by Alan Myson; “On the Edge” by Or Chausha and Yaniv Barmeli
Credit: NASA
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Soyuz MS 24 Landing Day Highlights
NASA astronaut Loral O’Hara, Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy, and Belarus spaceflight participant Marina Vasilevskaya closed the hatch of the Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft on April 6 ahead of their landing later that day. Following hatch closure, the vehicle undocked from the International Space Station’s Rassvet module, returning to Earth a few hours later for a parachute-assisted landing on the steppe of Kazakhstan. During her mission, O’Hara spent 204 days in space living and working aboard the microgravity laboratory to advance scientific knowledge and demonstrate new technologies for future human and robotic exploration missions as part of NASA’s Moon and Mars exploration approach, including lunar missions through NASA’s Artemis program.
Join NASA as we go forward to the Moon and on to Mars -- discover the latest on Earth, the Solar System and beyond with a weekly update in your inbox.
Subscribe at: https://www.nasa.gov/subscribe
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NASA Astronaut Tracy Dyson Launch to the Space Station
Astronaut Tracy C. Dyson, a spaceflight veteran who has logged over 188 days in orbit, is set to launch on her next mission to the International Space Station.
Dyson, cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy, and spaceflight participant Marina Vasilevskaya of Belarus is set to lift off at 8:36 a.m. EDT (1236 UTC) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan aboard their Soyuz MS-25 spacecraft. This will be Dyson's third spaceflight.
After two days in orbit, the Soyuz will arrive at the International Space Station's Prichal module for a scheduled docking at 11:09 a.m. EDT (1509 UTC) Monday, March 25. Dyson is scheduled to spend six months aboard the station, conducting research to help us learn how to live in space while making life better back on Earth.
Learn more about Saturday's launch: https://go.nasa.gov/3IMDTZy
Credit: NASA/Tracy C. Dyson
#NASA #Astronaut #SpaceStation
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Blastoff! SpaceX Starship launches to space on 3rd integrated test flight
SpaceX launched Starship on its Integrated Flight Test 3 from their Starbase facility in South Texas on March 14, 2024.
Full Story: https://www.space.com/spacex-starship...
Credit: SpaceX
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NASA's SpaceX Crew-8 Launch (Official NASA Live Broadcast)
Watch live with us as a crew of four launch on NASA's SpaceX Crew-8 mission to the International Space Station. Liftoff is targeted at 10:53 p.m. EST (0353 UTC), Sunday, March 3.
The launch attempt March 2 was postponed due to unfavorable conditions in the flight path of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft.
The crew will lift off in their SpaceX Dragon spacecraft, powered by a Falcon 9 rocket, from Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Members include:
• NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick, commander
• NASA astronaut Michael Barratt, pilot
• NASA astronaut Jeanette Epps, mission specialist
• Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Grebenkin, mission specialist
Visit our Crew-8 blog for the latest mission news: https://blogs.nasa.gov/crew-8
Over 200 science experiments and technology demonstrations will take place during Crew-8's mission of approximately six months in space. Experiments will include using stem cells to create organoid models to study degenerative diseases, studying the effects of microgravity and UV radiation on plants at a cellular level, and testing whether wearing pressure cuffs on the legs could prevent fluid shifts and reduce health problems in astronauts. Learn more about the mission and science at: https://www.nasa.gov/missions/station...
Thumbnail credit: SpaceX
Credit: NASA
#NASA #Crew8
Transcript
Follow along using the transcript.
Show transcript
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LIVE Cygnus cargo spacecraft arrives at the ISS
#ISS #InternationalSpaceStation #Cygnus
A Northrop Grumman's Cygnus cargo spacecraft arrives to the International Space Station to deliver supplies and science experiments.
Credit: NASA, Reuters
#ISS #InternationalSpaceStation #Cygnus #spacecraft #science #space #live
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Expedition70 Progress 86 Cargo Ship Launch from Baikonur
The uncrewed Roscosmos ISS Progress 86 cargo spacecraft launched to the International Space Station from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan Dec. 1 on a Soyuz booster rocket. Progress is filled with almost three tons of supplies and cargo and docked to the Poisk module after a two-orbit rendezvous. The resupply spacecraft will remain docked to the space station for approximately six-months.
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First US Commercial Moon Launch NASA Broadcast
Watch Astrobotic’s Peregrine lunar lander lift off from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Vulcan rocket. ULA and Astrobotic are targeting 2:18 a.m. EST (0718 UTC) Monday, Jan. 8, 2024, for the first US commercial robotic launch to the Moon’s surface. The NASA payloads aboard the lander aim to help us develop capabilities needed to explore the Moon under Artemis and in advance of human missions on the lunar surface.
For more information about our Commercial Lunar Payload Services initiative, visit: https://go.nasa.gov/3RFR0A5
Credit: NASA
Thumbnail photo credit: United Launch Alliance
#NASA #Moon #Artemis
Transcript
Follow along using the transcript.
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NASA Artemis II Crew Live Training
NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canadian Space Agency (CSA) astronaut Jeremy Hansen train for their venture around the Moon. Artemis II will be NASA’s first crewed flight test of the Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft around the Moon to verify today’s capabilities for humans to explore deep space and pave the way for long-term exploration and science on the lunar surface. This resource reel includes training footage recorded in 2023.
Join NASA as we go forward to the Moon and on to Mars -- discover the latest on Earth, the Solar System and beyond with a weekly update in your inbox.
Credit: NASA
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NASA Explorers Touch-and-Go TAG
#NASAExplorers
It was Touch-and-Go there for a few seconds...literally!
OSIRIS-REx had only six seconds to collect a sample of asteroid Bennu – in a maneuver called TAG, or Touch-and-Go – while the #NASAExplorers behind the mission waited anxiously from 200 million miles away.
Catch up with NASA Explorers, also streaming on https://plus.nasa.gov.
Created by: James Tralie
Producers: James Tralie, Dan Gallagher, Lauren Ward, Katy Mersmann
Scientists: Dante Lauretta, Mike Moreau
Operations: Beau Bierhaus, Coralie Adam
Broadcast Hosts: Michelle Thaller, James Tralie, Gary Napier, Nancy Neal Jones
Videographers: Rob Andreoli, John Philyaw, John Caldwell
Animation: Walt Feimer, Michael Lentz, Jonathan North, Adriana Manrique Gutierrez, Krystofer Kim, James Tralie, Bailee DesRocher, Jacquelyn DeMink, Lisa Poje
Sound Design: James Tralie
Data Visualization: Kel Elkins
NASA+ Executive Producer: Rebecca Sirmons
Music provided by Universal Production Music: “Voyager” by Jeremy Stack; “Moment in Time” by David Thomas Connolly; “Held” by Benji Paul Merrison and Will Slater; “Unstoppable Urge” by Frederik Wiedmann; “King of the Mountain” by Steven David Fay; “Night Watch” by Jeremy Stack; “Shadow Shifter” by Michael James Burns; “Follow the Drinking Gourd” by Kavin Hoo; “Conquering” by Alan Myson; “Clair de Lune” by Claude Debussy; “Human Stories” by Dominic Francis Glynn; “Marked for Flight” by Kavin Hoo; “Never End” by Sergey Azbel; “Getting Things Done” by Theodore Vidgen; “Dark String Bend” by Benji Paul Merrison and Will Slater; “First Rains” by Benji Paul Merrison and Will Slater; “Natural Wonders” by Benji Paul Merrison and Will Slater; “Successful Return” by Alan Boyd; “Frosty Dawn” by Benji Paul Merrison and Will Slater; “Starfall” by Sergey Azbel; “Lost Thought” by Adriano Aponte
Credit: NASA
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