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Wernher von Braun’s rocket team was one of the most influential technological forces in the 20th century. The von Braun team forever changed warfare with its 200-mile-range V-2 missile. Despite the constant allied bombing of Germany during World War II which cut supply lines and forced manufacturing operations underground, the scientists and engineers on von Braun’s team refined and developed their work to the point that, when they arranged their surrender to the Americans at the end of the war, von Braun announced that he had a rocket on the drawing board that could fly from Germany to New York. Little wonder, then, that the rivalry was so keen between the U.S., Russia and Britain to gain their services.

 

After World War II, von Braun’s rocket team created the first long-range ballistic missiles for the U.S. They worked on the Explorer program that resulted in the first American satellite to orbit the Earth. And within a decade they developed and built the huge 363-foot-tall Saturn rocket that sent man to the Moon.

 

The book “The Rocket Team” provides insight into the wartime growth of rocketry and tells how the men were brought to the U.S., and established first at White Sands, NM, and then at Hunstville, AL. Included, too, is a chapter on the development of post-war Soviet rocketry, based on the work of the members of the von Braun team who chose to go East instead of West.

 

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: Jared Lyons

 

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NASA Media Usage Guidelines

On 10 October 2016, at 20:00 GMT (22:00 CEST), ESA's 35m deep-space tracking station at Cebreros, Spain, transmitted a message toward the North Star, as part of an project dubbed "A Simple Response to an Elemental Message." More details via blogs.esa.int/rocketscience/2016/07/28/a-simple-response/ Image credit: ESA/JL Lopez

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: NASA

 

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More about Artemis

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

DLR Annual General Assembly / Jahreshauptversammlung & Science Slam 2013

 

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: Eric Bordelon

 

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More about Artemis

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

Dienstag, 20.12., 20:30 Konzert von Wernher von Brown Note

 

Florian Pfaffenberger: drums

Julian Turner: hammond organ

Dario Wokurka: guitar

 

"Ein herausragendes Jazztrio" (FAZ)

"This is rocket science" (NYT)

"Nature does not know extinction; all it knows is transformation" (Wernher von Braun)

 

Kiosk offen

Dresscode braun

Eintritt frei

 

SAVE YOUR DATE

Bildhauerateliers

Kurzbauergasse 9

1020 Wien

Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L II USM

 

Boy Scout model rocket merit badge

On 10 October 2016, at 20:00 GMT (22:00 CEST), ESA's 35m deep-space tracking station at Cebreros, Spain, transmitted a message toward the North Star, as part of an project dubbed "A Simple Response to an Elemental Message." More details via blogs.esa.int/rocketscience/2016/07/28/a-simple-response/ Image credit: ESA/D Scuka

Molly B's San Diego Swimwear shoot, Jonah Gilmore; Rocket Science Photography, models Callie Gilbert, Waverly Giannotti, Catherine Yoon & Ashley Hildre, MUA's: Cynthia & Shelby McElroy

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: NASA

 

Read more

 

More about Artemis

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

Students from across the country spent a week learning about rocket science, and the technology, engineering and math that feeds the smoke and fire of a launch at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center’s Space Camp in Huntsville, Al., sponsored by Boeing. Boeing Space Launch System rocket experts and interns were on hand to help.

 

Boeing provides this photo for the public to share. Media interested in high-resolution images for publication should email boeingmedia@boeing.com or visit boeing.mediaroom.com. Users may not manipulate or use this photo in commercial materials, advertisements, emails, products, or promotions without licensed permission from Boeing. If you are interested in using Boeing imagery for commercial purposes, email imagelicensing@boeing.com or visit www.boeingimages.com.

A band I'd never heard of before last night.and they really impressed me (as did the next band - My Left Foot).

 

Check out their website if you get a chance; especially love "The Snake Bank" - theelectricguitars.bandcamp.com/album/the-electric-guitars

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: NASA

 

Read more

 

More about Artemis

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: NASA

 

Read more

 

More about Artemis

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

Students from across the country spent a week learning about rocket science, and the technology, engineering and math that feeds the smoke and fire of a launch at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center’s Space Camp in Huntsville, Al., sponsored by Boeing. Boeing Space Launch System rocket experts and interns were on hand to help.

 

Boeing provides this photo for the public to share. Media interested in high-resolution images for publication should email boeingmedia@boeing.com or visit boeing.mediaroom.com. Users may not manipulate or use this photo in commercial materials, advertisements, emails, products, or promotions without licensed permission from Boeing. If you are interested in using Boeing imagery for commercial purposes, email imagelicensing@boeing.com or visit www.boeingimages.com.

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: NASA

 

Read more

 

More about Artemis

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

Next to the bathroom at Rocket Science Studios. Backstory unknown. Drugs presumed involved. Damn, I guess I commented.

Students from across the country spent a week learning about rocket science, and the technology, engineering and math that feeds the smoke and fire of a launch at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center’s Space Camp in Huntsville, Al., sponsored by Boeing. Boeing Space Launch System rocket experts and interns were on hand to help.

 

Boeing provides this photo for the public to share. Media interested in high-resolution images for publication should email boeingmedia@boeing.com or visit boeing.mediaroom.com. Users may not manipulate or use this photo in commercial materials, advertisements, emails, products, or promotions without licensed permission from Boeing. If you are interested in using Boeing imagery for commercial purposes, email imagelicensing@boeing.com or visit www.boeingimages.com.

DLR Annual General Assembly / Jahreshauptversammlung & Science Slam 2013

 

Students from across the country spent a week learning about rocket science, and the technology, engineering and math that feeds the smoke and fire of a launch at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center’s Space Camp in Huntsville, Al., sponsored by Boeing. Boeing Space Launch System rocket experts and interns were on hand to help.

 

Boeing provides this photo for the public to share. Media interested in high-resolution images for publication should email boeingmedia@boeing.com or visit boeing.mediaroom.com. Users may not manipulate or use this photo in commercial materials, advertisements, emails, products, or promotions without licensed permission from Boeing. If you are interested in using Boeing imagery for commercial purposes, email imagelicensing@boeing.com or visit www.boeingimages.com.

On 10 October 2016, at 20:00 GMT (22:00 CEST), ESA's 35m deep-space tracking station at Cebreros, Spain, transmitted a message toward the North Star, as part of an project dubbed "A Simple Response to an Elemental Message." More details via blogs.esa.int/rocketscience/2016/07/28/a-simple-response/ Image credit: ESA/JL Lopez

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: Eric Bordelon

 

Read more

 

More about Artemis

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

Students from across the country spent a week learning about rocket science, and the technology, engineering and math that feeds the smoke and fire of a launch at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center’s Space Camp in Huntsville, Al., sponsored by Boeing. Boeing Space Launch System rocket experts and interns were on hand to help.

 

Boeing provides this photo for the public to share. Media interested in high-resolution images for publication should email boeingmedia@boeing.com or visit boeing.mediaroom.com. Users may not manipulate or use this photo in commercial materials, advertisements, emails, products, or promotions without licensed permission from Boeing. If you are interested in using Boeing imagery for commercial purposes, email imagelicensing@boeing.com or visit www.boeingimages.com.

Back in the studio with everyone's favorite sexy gas mask mannequin.

The core stage for NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon moved to the agency’s Pegasus barge on Jan. 8, 2020. The 212-foot Space Launch System rocket stage, built by NASA and lead contractor Boeing at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, rolled the onto Pegasus, which shipped it to NASA's Stennis Space Center on Jan. 12. Here, it will undergo a comprehensive series of engineering tests called the Green Run. After Green Run is complete, the core stage will be sent to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, where it will join with SLS's giant boosters and the Orion spacecraft to launch into space on Artemis I.

 

Image credit: Eric Bordelon

 

Read more

 

More about Artemis

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

On 10 October 2016, at 20:00 GMT (22:00 CEST), ESA's 35m deep-space tracking station at Cebreros, Spain, transmitted a message toward the North Star, as part of an project dubbed "A Simple Response to an Elemental Message." More details via blogs.esa.int/rocketscience/2016/07/28/a-simple-response/ Image credit: ESA/D Scuka

Students from across the country spent a week learning about rocket science, and the technology, engineering and math that feeds the smoke and fire of a launch at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center’s Space Camp in Huntsville, Al., sponsored by Boeing. Boeing Space Launch System rocket experts and interns were on hand to help.

 

Boeing provides this photo for the public to share. Media interested in high-resolution images for publication should email boeingmedia@boeing.com or visit boeing.mediaroom.com. Users may not manipulate or use this photo in commercial materials, advertisements, emails, products, or promotions without licensed permission from Boeing. If you are interested in using Boeing imagery for commercial purposes, email imagelicensing@boeing.com or visit www.boeingimages.com.

DLR Annual General Assembly / Jahreshauptversammlung & Science Slam 2013

 

DLR Annual General Assembly / Jahreshauptversammlung & Science Slam 2013

 

Anousheh Ansari is on her way to the orbit. So great! She is indeed allowed to taking a lipstick with her!

SHEFEX 2 at Andoya Rocket Range. Credit: DLR, CC-BY 3.0

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