This weeks NASA report on activities aboard the Int. Space Station:
Video: ‘Space to Ground’ report on ISS activities – Oct.17.14
This weeks NASA report on activities aboard the Int. Space Station:
This weeks NASA report on activities aboard the Int. Space Station:
Composer and musician Warren Greveson will debut his work, Voyager for Orchestra and Four iPads, Sunday, Oct. 19th in Mount Dora, Florida: Music for orchestra and iPads debuts in Mount Dora – Orlando Sentinel .
The composition will be performed by the Stetson University Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Anthony Hose.
The work is inspired by the two NASA Voyager spacecraft. The performance will be accompanied with a film by Maurice Lock.
PBS has posted a video of the documentary aired this week about the history of women space travelers: Women in Space | MAKERS Season 2 | PBS –
Makers: Women in Space traces the history of women pioneers in the U.S. space program. Some, like aviators Wally Funk and Jerrie Cobb, passed the same grueling tests as male astronauts, only to be dismissed by NASA, the military, and even Lyndon Johnson, as a distraction. It wasn’t until 1995 that Eileen Collins became the first woman to pilot a spacecraft. The program includes interviews with Collins, as well as Sally Ride’s classmates Shannon Lucid, Rhea Seddon and Kathryn Sullivan, and features Mae Jemison, the first woman of color astronaut, and Peggy Whitson, the first female commander of the International Space Station. The hour ends with the next generation of women engineers, mathematicians and astronauts—the new group of pioneers, like Marleen Martinez, who continue to make small but significant steps forward.
Rick Boozer, the Astro Maven, tells me that on Thursday, Oct. 16th at 7:30 pm he will give a presentation at Roper Mountain Science Center in Greenville, South Carolina. The title of his talk is Hunting for an Exoplanet Using Stellar Photometry.
Rick has been posting a series of tutorials on his blog explaining the science of photometry and how the astronomical imaging software known as AIP4WIN can be used “by both amateur astronomers and professionals for some very advanced scientific work”.
The BrownSpaceman blog hosts the latest Carnival of Space.