Stories of daring, stories of technological feats, stories of prevailing against the odds ... these are the stories we tell at the National Air and Space Museum. Dive in to the stories below to discover, learn, and be inspired. 

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An airplane shaped spaceship with several circular windows at the front.

August 25, 2015

SpaceShipOne Folds Its Wing

Story

For the past decade, SpaceShipOne has been on display as one of the hanging artifacts in the Boeing Milestones of Flight Hall. It was specifically positioned to depict the aircraft in its initial stage of powered flight (30 degrees, nose up attitude) just after release from its White Knight mother ship, which carried it aloft to an altitude of about 14,326 meters (47,000 feet). In March of this year, SpaceShipOne was lowered to the floor as part of a major renovation of the Milestones gallery. During this time, it received a thorough condition assessment and photo documentation by conservator Sharon Norquest. After surface cleaning and minor conservation work is completed, it is scheduled to be rehung this week and will be one of the major artifacts in the new Boeing Milestones of Flight Hall, scheduled to open in July 2016. The renovation project provided us with a unique opportunity to consider how we showcase SpaceShipOne in the future.

View of a celebration with the New Horizons missions operations team following the successful New Horizons mission.

August 22, 2015

Inside Look: Celebrating New Horizons With the Mission Team

Story

On July 13 and 14, I was invited to visit the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, for the New Horizons Pluto Flyby Events.

Disc of Pluto, a tan brown and brown dwarf planet. A light brown heart is visible in the lower right quadrant.

August 21, 2015

New Horizons: The Gift That Keeps Giving

Story

On July 14, the New Horizons spacecraft completed a 9.5-year-long, 4.8-billion kilometer (3-billion mile) journey to the object furthest from the Sun to be visited by a spacecraft.

Bottom view of a section of the International Space Station with a cylinder-shaped module with one side attached to a smaller solar panel. The other side is attached to a much larger solar panel.

August 19, 2015

Zvezda Service Module Celebrates 15 Years in Orbit

Story | This Day in History

Through the commotion of a very successful July which included the New Horizons mission to Pluto, the 40th anniversary of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project, the 46th anniversary of Apollo 11, and the Museum’s very first Kickstarter project, there is one anniversary that we may have inadvertently overlooked. In July, the Zvezda (Russian for “star”) module of the International Space Station (ISS) celebrated 15 years in orbit.

Partial back view of an Apollo 14 spacesuit, with a focus on the two zipper compartments on the spacesuit. Styled on mannequin.

August 16, 2015

The Shepard & Armstrong Spacesuits: 8 Fun Facts

Story | Armstrong Spacesuit

There's more to these suits than meets the eye.

Portrait of Claudia Alexander

August 14, 2015

Remembering Claudia Alexander—Space Scientist

Story

Claudia Alexander was perhaps not well-known to the general public, but within the space and science community she was a valued colleague and friend whose contribution to the field of space exploration was significant and lasting.

Photographs of Armstrong and Shephard side by side

August 12, 2015

What does Alan Shepard’s Mercury suit have to do with Neil Armstrong’s Apollo 11 suit?

Story | Armstrong Spacesuit

We’ve received a few comments and questions about why our stretch goal for the Neil Armstrong #RebootTheSuit Kickstarter project is Alan Shepard’s Mercury Freedom 7 spacesuit. The short answer is that the two suits bracket the ideas and accomplishments of the Apollo space program.

Celebrating the Moon Landing

August 10, 2015

#RebootTheSuit: Your Apollo 11 Stories

Story | Armstrong Spacesuit

One of my earliest memories is of watching the Moon landing on TV with my dad. I was barely four years old, so the whole thing really kind of went over my head. I do remember being upset that "Mr. Dressup" had been pre-empted. Also, I was fascinated by the fact that my dad was practically climbing into the TV, he was so excited! (He was a science teacher—genes that skipped me, sadly!) I learned that day, if people could walk on the Moon, anything was possible.

Armstrong's Pre-Flight Spacesuit

August 07, 2015

How do you put on an Apollo spacesuit?

Story | Inside the Conservation Lab

Learn how to put on an Apollo spacesuit.

A group of Museum employees in charge of handling a gray spaceship studio model from the Star Trek series stand behind the studio model.

August 04, 2015

Nerd Camp

Story | Conserving "Enterprise"

The door was locked, but a swipe of a security access card rewarded us with a satisfying “click.” Someone pushed the double doors open and we stepped into the laboratory. We paused for the briefest instant as my eyes, and those of my fellow campers, were transfixed on the object on the other side of the room: The Starship Enterprise from the original Star Trek series.