Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The NASA website hosts a large number of images from the Soviet/Russian space agency, and other non-American space agencies. These are not necessarily in the public domain. Materials based on Hubble Space Telescope data may be copyrighted if they are not explicitly produced by the STScI. See also {{PD-Hubble}} and {{Cc-Hubble}}.
It is part of the Education and public outreach team and assists with various functions to help educate the public, mainly children, about the SDO mission, facts about the Sun and Space weather. [26] Camilla also assists in cross-informing the public about other NASA missions and space related projects.
The Golden Record, the official NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory page about the record The Infinite Voyager : The Golden Record at the Wayback Machine (archived November 6, 2014), an MIT page of then-student Lily Bui comprising a collection of recordings included
NASA reports the flare emerged from the far northwest corner of the sun and peaked around 12:02 p.m. EST. Impact was largely felt on the side of the Earth that was facing the sun at the time ...
In 2016, NASA released an animation of the sun doing a somersault. The capture was the result of a seven-hour maneuver the SDO completes once a year to take an accurate measure of the star’s edge.
His work Mythodea: Music for NASA's Mars Odyssey Mission is reflective of his interest in space exploration. [9] The Police's "Walking on the Moon" single was released in 1979. The accompanying music video was filmed at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, with the band performing in front of the Saturn V displayed outside the Vehicle Assembly ...
The Parker Solar Probe concept originates in the 1958 report by the Fields and Particles Group, Committee 8 of the National Academy of Sciences' Space Science Board, [18] [19] [20] which proposed several space missions including "a solar probe to pass inside the orbit of Mercury to study the particles and fields in the vicinity of the Sun".
The event marked the third time a song had ever been intentionally transmitted into deep space (the first being Russia's Teen Age Message in 2001 and the second being the 2003 Cosmic Call 2 message which included Starman by David Bowie and music from the Hungarian band KFT), [2] [3] and was approved by Paul McCartney, Yoko Ono, and Apple Records.