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This Week at NASA | New Astronaut Candidates, ISS Spacewalk, more

Uploaded 08/23/2013

New Astronaut Candidates, ISS Spacewalk, more

A big week for NASA’s newest astronaut candidates … chosen from more 6-thousand applicants, the group of eight arrived at Johnson Space Center to begin training for future missions and were introduced to the media during a news conference with Administrator Charlie Bolden. The candidates could be some of the first explorers to help NASA and its international partners blaze the trail outlined in the recently announced Global Exploration Roadmap. The roadmap makes clear the U.S. and its international space partners share an interest in pursuing ambitious exploration goals. Also, Commercial Capsule Visit , Captive Carry Test, ISS Spacewalk, Lunar Mission Previewed, Webb Backplane Arrives, Climate Mission Media Day, NASA 905 to Houston and more.

(c) NASA | SCVTV

 

TRANSCRIPT

 

NEW EXPLORERS, NEW ROADMAP – JSC/HQ

#NASA

A big week for NASA’s newest astronaut candidates … chosen from more 6-thousand applicants, the group of eight arrived at Johnson Space Center to begin training for future missions and were introduced to the media during a news conference with Administrator Charlie Bolden.

Charlie Bolden, NASA Adminstrator:
“These new astronauts we’re introducing today are critical to achieving our ambitious goals. They will help us to continue to lead the world in exploration.”

The candidates could be some of the first explorers to help NASA and its international partners blaze the trail outlined in the recently announced Global Exploration Roadmap. The roadmap makes clear the U.S. and its international space partners share an interest in pursuing ambitious exploration goals.

Charlie Bolden, NASA Administrator:
“The roadmap demonstrates the important role of NASA’s asteroid mission and advancing the capabilities needed for exploring Mars and the economic and societal value of exploration and what it brings to all of us.’

The roadmap also highlights the critical role of the International Space Station in preparing for deep-space exploration, and the importance of asteroid missions in advancing capabilities needed to explore Mars.

COMMERCIAL CAPSULE VISIT – JSC

@Commercial_Crew

While in Houston, Administrator Bolden also visited Boeing’s Houston Product Support Center to check out a fully-outfitted mockup of the company’s CST-100 capsule.

The vehicle is being developed in partnership with NASA’s Commercial Crew Program to provide safe, reliable and cost-effective transport to and from the International Space Station.

CAPTIVE CARRY TEST – DFRC/KSC

@Commercial_Crew

Another Commercial Crew partner, Sierra Nevada Corporation, suspended its Dream Chaser spacecraft from a heavy lift helicopter over California’s Mojave Desert during a successful captive-carry test.

radio chatter:
“Simulate release. Simulated – good release.”

The exercise simulated the path Dream Chaser will take during free-flight tests scheduled for later this year.

ISS SPACEWALK – JSC

#ISS

Back outside the International Space Station for the second time in six days, Expedition 36 Flight Engineers Fyodor Yurchikhin and Alexander Misurkin, in Russian Orlan spacesuits, conducted another second spacewalk. The pair’s “to do” list included installing a platform on the Zvezda module for a telescope coming in the future and removing a visual alignment target on the Pirs Docking Compartment.

LUNAR MISSION PREVIEWED – WFF/GSFC/ARC

@NASALADEE

During a news briefing at NASA Headquarters, participants previewed the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer or LADEE mission – the agency’s next excursion to the moon and the first lunar mission launching from Wallops Flight Facility.

Butler Hine, LADEE Project Manager:
“One of the questions about dust on the moon is an engineering question – how do you design things so that they can survive the dust environment.”

Understanding the environment around the moon will help scientists better understand other planetary bodies in the universe. LADEE is scheduled to launch Sept. 6.

WEBB BACKPLANE ARRIVES – MSFC

#JWST

The Primary Mirror Backplane Support Structure of the James Webb Space Telescope was delivered to Marshall Space Flight Center for testing in the X-ray and Cryogenic Test Facility. The backplane holds JWST’s huge hexagonal shaped mirror segment and other elements. To prepare the Webb for the extreme temperatures of space, its components are tested at the X-ray and Cryogenic Facility at temperatures down to a frigid minus 414 degrees Fahrenheit.

CLIMATE MISSION MEDIA DAY –JSC

#SEAC4RS

Members of the media stopped by Houston’s Ellington Field near Johnson Space Center for behind-the-scenes tours and access to the SEAC4RS mission, NASA’s airborne study on how storm systems and air pollution from wildfires and other sources affect our climate.

SEAC4RS is the agency’s most complex airborne science study of the year – with more than 200 support personnel and observations from NASA satellites, aircraft and ground sites.

NASA 905 TO HOUSTON – JSC

#NASA

The media got a “two-fer” in Houston that day because during another event at Ellington Field, plans were announced to relocate NASA 9-0-5, the 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft, to the Space Center Houston visitor center for permanent public display. The SCA safely transported space shuttles around the country on 68 ferry flights from 1974 to September 2012.

NASA ANNIVERSARY: Passing of Neil Armstrong, August 25, 2012 – HQ

@NASAhistory

On August 25, 2012, astronaut Neil Armstrong – passed away after complications from heart surgery. The Apollo 11 commander was the first person to set foot on the lunar surface during the 1969 mission to the moon. NASA and Washington’s National Cathedral held a memorial service in September of last year, during which Armstrong was remembered by those in attendance as an American hero, selfless educator and a humanitarian. Neil Armstrong was 82.

And that’s This Week @NASA.

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