Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The International Space Station, as seen by a visiting spacecraft in 2021. This article is a list of accidents and incidents related to the International Space Station (ISS). It includes mishaps occurring on board the ISS, flights to and from the space station, as well as other program related incidents.
This photo from the International Space Station shows Hurricane Milton as a Category 5 storm in the Gulf of Mexico on Oct. 8, 2024. ... Delta flight returns to Boston due to 'smoky odor' detected ...
The ISS seems to be slowly floating over the monstrous storm, but it's actually traveling in orbit at about 17,500 mph. MORE: Hurricane Milton tracker: Florida braces for Wednesday night landfall ...
NASA released a timelapse video that shows the eye of Hurricane Milton as seen from the International Space Station orbiting 275 miles above Earth.
On 2 January 2004, a minor air leak was detected on board the ISS. [2] At one point, five pounds of air per day were leaking into space and the internal pressure of the ISS dropped from nominal 14.7 psi down to 14.0 psi, although this did not pose an immediate threat to Michael Foale and Aleksandr Kaleri, the two astronauts on board.
Training jet crash 5 October 1967 Clifton C. Williams: Williams, flying alone in a T-38 jet from Cape Kennedy, Florida to Houston, Texas, crashed due to an aileron control mechanical failure, about 15 miles (24 km) north of Tallahassee, Florida. [28] Williams ejected too low for the parachute to open properly. [29]
Footage captured by the International Space Station showed Hurricane Helene on Thursday 26 September as it approached Florida. According to a statement on social media platform X, the ISS flew ...
However, because Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, the next launch was delayed further. With the destruction suffered by Michoud and NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi due to Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent flooding, the launch of the next shuttle mission was further delayed until July 4, 2006.