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The four women in charge of the effort to build and test the 212-foot-tall rocket stage that will enable NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon watch as the first completed core stage for NASA's Space Launch System Program rolls out from the agency's Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans on Jan. 8, 2020. These key leaders are, from left, Lisa Bates, NASA Stages element deputy manager; Jennifer Boland-Masterson, Boeing Michoud production/operations manager; Julie Bassler, NASA Stages element manager; and, Noelle Zietsman, Boeing chief engineer. Each of these women manage the entire scope of design, development, testing and production of the complex core stage that will power the super heavy-lift rocket and the agency's Artemis lunar missions. Combined, the women have 90 years of experience in the aerospace and defense industries. Bassler and Bates previously held leadership positions within many NASA programs and projects, including International Space Station, space shuttle, microgravity experiments, robotic lunar landers and other launch vehicles. Â Manufacturing of the core stages for the SLS rocket is a multistep, collaborative process for NASA and Boeing, the core stage lead contractor. The first core stage for Artemis I is undergoing the core stage Green Run test series at NASA's Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, ahead of the program's first launch. Michoud manufacturing teams are currently producing core stages for the second and third Artemis missions.
NASA is working to land the first woman and next man on the Moon by 2024. SLS is part of NASA’s backbone for deep space exploration, along with Orion and the Gateway in orbit around the Moon. SLS will be the most powerful rocket in the world and will send astronauts in the Orion spacecraft farther into space than ever before. No other rocket is capable of carrying astronauts in Orion around the Moon.
Image credit: NASA/Jude Guidry
Autosave-File vom d-lab2/3 der AgfaPhoto GmbH
Camera: Nikon FM2
Format: 35mm
Film: Fuji 100 Color Slide Film
stonefactionbirding2014.blogspot.co.uk/2015/09/fantastic-...
Had amazingly close views of this young Red Footed Falcon in Aberdeen today. A lifer for me, and in the sunshine too (it clouded over and the light deteriorated greatly not long after we got these).
Albatros de Patas Negras, Black-footed Albatross, Phoebastria nigripes.
IUCN: Near Threatened(NT)
Especie # 1.883
Hachijojima Ferry
Miyake
Japan
Überall entlang der Westküste Amerikas findet man diese Felsen an der Pazifikküste -wie die Five Foot Rocks in Bandon im Bundesstaat Oregon. Der komprimierte Sandstein war vor Jahrmillionen noch am Grund des Meeres und hat sich dann durch Verschiebung der Erdplatten nach oben geschoben. Die Brandung hat dann die tollsten Gebilde aus diesem Gestein geformt. Den schönsten und größten hat man Namen gegeben. Die Five Foot Rocks sehen z.B. aus der Luft aus wie große Fußabdrücke. Wer das überprüfen möchte: einfach mal bei Google Maps nachschauen ;)
Colosseum Cat. 7 foot tall with garlic breath. Official mascot so no request for donations or catnip. Cats and the ruins of Roma are synonymous. That is because the city council of Rome protects the cats living among the ancient ruins of the Colosseum, the Forum and Torre Argentina. Much of the Ben Hur movie was shot here. I-Phone composite picture