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STS089-301-006 - STS-089 - Interior views of Spacehab during STS-89

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - Inside the payload changeout room on Launch Pad 39B, STS-121 Mission Specialist Lisa Nowak examines part of the payload for the mission. She is dressed in a clean room suit, appropriate for the environmentally clean or "white room" condition in which the payload resides before being transferred to the shuttle's payload bay. The payload includes the multi-purpose logistics module Leonardo, with supplies and equipment for the International Space Station; the lightweight multi-purpose experiment support structure carrier; and the integrated cargo carrier. Crew members are at NASA's Kennedy Space Center for Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test activities, which include equipment familiarization and a simulated launch countdown. Mission STS-121 is scheduled for launch on Space Shuttle Discovery on July 1. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett KSC-06pd1112

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- In the Operations and Checkout Building, the U.S. Lab, named Destiny, is moved to the rotation and handling fixture in preparation for testing in the altitude chamber. Destiny is scheduled to fly on mission STS-98 in early 2001. During the mission, the crew will install the Lab in the Space Station during a series of three space walks. The STS-98 mission will provide the Station with science research facilities and expand its power, life support and control capabilities. The U.S. Lab module continues a long tradition of microgravity materials research, first conducted by Skylab and later Shuttle and Spacelab missions. Destiny is expected to be a major feature in future research, providing facilities for biotechnology, fluid physics, combustion, and life sciences research KSC00pp0829

STS101-395-013 - STS-101 - View of hatch hardware in the Node 1/Unity module

Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL AIM Arrival

S115E06982 - STS-115 - Yeast GAP in the MDDK of the Space Shuttle Atlantis during Expedition 13 / STS-115 Joint Operations

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- In the Space Station Processing Facility, the U.S. Laboratory Destiny, a component of the International Space Station, glides overhead other hardware while visitors watch from a window (right). On the floor, left to right, are two Multi-Purpose Logistics Modules (MPLMs), Raffaello (far left) and Leonardo, and a Pressurized Mating Adapter-3 (right). Destiny is being moved to a payload canister for transfer to the Operations and Checkout Building where it will be tested in the altitude chamber. Destiny is scheduled to fly on mission STS-98 in early 2001. During the mission, the crew will install the Lab in the Space Station during a series of three space walks. The STS-98 mission will provide the Station with science research facilities and expand its power, life support and control capabilities. The U.S. Lab module continues a long tradition of microgravity materials research, first conducted by Skylab and later Shuttle and Spacelab missions. Destiny is expected to be a major feature in future research, providing facilities for biotechnology, fluid physics, combustion, and life sciences research KSC00pp0807

Saturn V - Saturn V instrument unit (IU)

STS106-366-030 - STS-106 - View of the forward hatch of Node 1 taken during STS-106

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TAURUS - GLORY - FAIRING ARRIVAL 2010-4408

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TAURUS - GLORY - FAIRING ARRIVAL

Public domain photograph of NASA experimental aircraft development, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

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kennedy space center taurus glory fairing arrival fairing arrival high resolution nasa
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17/08/2010
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NASA
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https://images.nasa.gov/
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Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

label_outline Explore Fairing, Arrival, Glory

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kennedy space center taurus glory fairing arrival fairing arrival high resolution nasa