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Reliance - part of a vertical lathe in the NASA's Michoud machine shop. Some of these machines have been on site since the 1940’s but are still used today to make parts for spacecraft or to build the tooling/structures that goes into building spacecraft.
A participant in a recent NASA Social asks a question about the agency's Earth missions [link] on behalf of her elementary school students. At NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California
Cynthia Simmons, ATLAS Instrument Project Manager. Cynthia is helping design and build a major component of the ICESat-2 Satellite that uses lasers to measure elevations on earth's surface. She's been at NASA for over three decades.
On June 6, a NASA social media event was held at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, to discuss the New Horizons spacecraft and its upcoming flyby of the dwarf planet Pluto, scheduled July 14. More than 30 NASA social media followers from across the country applied for and were selected to attend the event, at their own cost.
The New Horizons spacecraft is part of NASA’s New Frontiers program and is managed by Marshall.
Learn more about the Marshall Center, New Horizons spacecraft and the Lowell Observatory at:
#NASAMarshall Facebook page:
www.facebook.com/nasamarshallcenter
#NASA's New Horizons Mission Page: www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/newhorizons/main/index.html
Lowell Observatory Facebook:
www.facebook.com/lowellobservatory
#PlutoFlyBy #Pluto #NASASocial
Image Credit: (NASA/MSFC/Christopher Blair)
Photo taken by Tory Bruno's wife I'm standing near the launch pad where Orion would take off on that Friday.
Picture taken from the NASA Orion EFT-1 Test Flight, from Cape Canaveral, FL
Today was the #StateOfNASA event at NASA centers across America. I was fortunate to get to attend the #NASASocial that covered the presentation and then touring the facility. Great things are going on at Stennis and their future looks bright.
Big portion of Discovery #NASASocial team pause for group photo. Sarah Sulick (@Smithsonian), Ivey Doyal (@airandspace), Elissa Frankle (@airandspace), Mamta Patel Nagaraja (@NASASocial), me, Jon Hallenberg (@airandspace), Stacey Brooks (@NASA_Technology). Where's everyone else? Over by the shuttle, I suppose.