I always uploaded launches from launch camera angles. I found this video particularly interesting. This video recorded three International Space Station crews watching the STS-126 Endeavour launch from space. You can see the launch on a 13' screen in the
It's slightly smaller than your TV cabinet and weighs a bit more than your school-going kid. But it's going where no TV and no kid has ever been before. It's called the Moon Impact Probe (MIP) — India's first attempt at touching down on the lunar surface.
Keith Cowing, my business partner at SpaceRef, was the co-instigator of this project. The video shows some of the refurbished machinery used to restore the images. In the monitor you can see an image being restored. See MoonViews.com for all the images.
After eight years and repeated photographs of a nearby star in hopes of finding planets, University of California, Berkeley, astronomer Paul Kalas finally has his prize: the first visible-light snapshots of a planet outside our solar system.
Hosted by Damon Talley of NASA's Digital Learning Network, the webcast takes you behind the scenes at Kennedy Space Center in Florida and includes an interview with Flow Director Ken Tenbusch, who oversees the critical work to prepare shuttle Endeavour fo
In 2012, Vega will carry ESA's Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle into space. The vehicle will then return to Earth to test a range of enabling systems and technologies for atmospheric re-entry. The video shows computer-generated animations of the vehicle