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. 

Showing 1291 - 1300 of 1761

In Plane View: Extra 260

August 02, 2015

The New Air Show in Town: Aerobatic Flight!

Story

The Aerobatic Flight exhibition at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, in Chantilly, Virginia, has a new addition—a film entitled, naturally, Aerobatic Flight! All the excitement of multiple airshows is packed into this lively film through clips of current pilots on the airshow scene and footage of legendary pilots from the dawn of the airshow.

A digitized card proving membership in the Pan Am First Moon Flights Club. On the right and top is a drawing of astronauts on the moon.

July 31, 2015

Were You a Member of the “First Moon Flights” Club?

Story

The Smithsonian would like to add to its national collection a Pan American Airways (Pan Am) “First Moon Flights” Club card as an example of early enthusiasm for space travel.

Examining Armstrong's Apollo 11 Boots

July 29, 2015

Houston We Don’t Have a Problem: #RebootTheSuit is Funded, Now What?

Story | Inside the Conservation Lab

The Smithsonian’s first-ever Kickstarter campaign to conserve, digitize, and display Neil Armstrong’s Apollo 11 spacesuit was fully backed in just five days!

A Museum conservation specialist (seen wearing a purple glove) applies a coat of acrylic resin in the process of cleaning an Apollo program medical instrumentation harness.

July 25, 2015

A Triage Treatment for Apollo Biomedical Sensors

Story | Inside the Conservation Lab

Much like medical triage, conservation triage analyzes the risk posed to an object and the hazards associated with not taking immediate action. Triage conservators ask questions such as: Can the object be handled safely by staff and researchers? Will the degradation of the object continue if it is not treated immediately? What treatment can we do, with the resources at hand, to keep this object stable as long as possible?

Detail of Armstrong's Suit

July 20, 2015

Reboot the Suit: Neil Armstrong’s Spacesuit and Kickstarter

Story | Armstrong Spacesuit

Today is a rather big day for the Museum. Not only are we celebrating the 46th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission, but we are also celebrating the launch of something quite new.

Self-portrait of female astronaut Sunita Williams eating ice cream from a cup aboard the International Space Station.

July 19, 2015

We All Scream - Even in Space - for Ice Cream

Story

As anyone who has ever braved the hot asphalt to chase down the siren song of an ice cream truck knows, the best cure for a sweltering summer day is ice cream. It’s fortunate then, that the summer heat cannot be felt within the confines of a spacecraft—the International Space Station is always a comfortable 72 degrees. Three hundred and fifty-four kilometers (220 miles) above Earth, ice cream is hard to come by.

CH-46 Lands Supplies

July 16, 2015

Phrog Farewell

Story

On August 1, the National Air and Space Museum will join with the United States Marine Corps and the National Museum of the Marine Corps to bid adieu to one of the most important American military aircraft of the past 50 years, the Boeing CH-46 Sea Knight, or “Phrog,” as it is almost universally known among Marines.

New Horizons Full-Scale Model

July 10, 2015

First Mission to Pluto: The Difficult Birth of New Horizons

Story

As we await the exciting results of New Horizons’ flyby of Pluto on July 14, it is all too easy to think that this mission was inevitable: the capstone to NASA’s spectacular exploration of all the planets (and ex-planets) of the solar system since the 1960s. Yet, it proved extraordinarily difficult to sustain a Pluto project.

A package of cigarettes with a white background. A graphic of a spacecraft orbiting a blue sphere is below the opening, which states "Apollo" in blue text and "Soyuz" in red text.

July 08, 2015

Apollo-Soyuz Commemorative Cigarettes 

Story | Under the Radar

Next week marks the 40th anniversary of an important moment in space history, when astronauts and cosmonauts greeted each other warmly in their docked Apollo and Soyuz spacecraft while orbiting above the Earth.

Partial radar view of the Moon, focusing on the Moon's craters in the center of the view.

July 02, 2015

Casting Shadows on the Moon

Story

Much of the Moon is blanketed by a thick layer of dust, built up from the rocky surface over billions of years by the impacts of small meteorites. Hidden beneath the dust is evidence of ancient geologic activity – great volcanic eruptions, tectonic shifts in the crust, and vast deposits of once-molten material hurled outward during the formation of the giant impact basins.