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 501 - 510 of 1735
March 28, 2021Sally Ride: Entrepreneur for Space, Science, and InclusionStory
| From the Archives
For many, their knowledge of Sally Ride begins and ends at her NASA career and the title of the first American woman in space. After she retired from NASA, Sally Ride utilized her groundbreaking status to launch a variety of business ventures (including Space.com and Sally Ride Science) which would inspire the next generation of astronauts and scientists.
Read moreMarch 26, 2021Anne Noggle’s Photographs of World War II Women Pilots: Portraits of Perspective and ReflectionStory
Anne Noggle (1922–2005) confronts themes of gender equality and aging through portraits of World War II women pilots in the United States and the Soviet Union. Her photographs convey their grit, defiance, femininity, and love of flying. Above all, they capture a spirit that bonds the rare group of aviation heroines together.
Read moreMarch 25, 2021Remembering Glynn S. LunneyStory
Remembering the life and legacy of NASA flight director Glynn Lunney.
Read moreMarch 25, 2021AirSpace Season 4, Ep. 4: Supermassive Black HoleStory
| AirSpace Podcast
Today we’re tackling something we’ve wanted to talk about for a long time (which is relative, because time and space lose all meaning there). They’re incredibly dense, super cool, and mind-bendingly-mysterious -- BLACK HOLES! But how do you imagine – let alone study—the unseeable? And seriously—what happened at the end of “Interstellar?”
Read moreMarch 24, 2021Explore the Wright FlyerStory
| Air and Space Photos
Explore all of the rich content about the Wright brothers' 1903 Flyer that can be found on the Museum's website.
Read moreMarch 22, 2021Tingmissartoq! Charles and Anne Lindbergh Tour GreenlandStory
| Air and Space Photos
Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, hosted the Lindberghs for three weeks in the summer of 1933 and one of their stops was the southern town of Julianehaab, now known as Qaqortoq.
Read moreMarch 16, 2021Homing in on Pigeons’ Contributions to World War IIStory
| From the Archives
Amid all these aircraft maintenance manuals, engine overhaul manuals, and parts catalogs in the Museum, there exists a U.S. Army Air Forces (AAF) manual that details the use of homing pigeons in combat zones during World War II.
Read moreMarch 16, 2021Spinning Out of Control: Gemini VIII’s Near-DisasterStory
On March 16, 1966, the Gemini VIII astronauts made the world’s first space docking, quickly followed by the first life-threatening, in-flight emergency in the short history of the U.S. human spaceflight program.
Read moreMarch 11, 2021AirSpace Season 4, Ep. 3: Water MeStory
| AirSpace Podcast
It seems like every time there’s big news from outer space, it’s that we found water some place—as traces of ice or wisps of vapor, embedded in rocks or bound up in dry-as-dirt-regolith. Today, Matt, Nick, and Emily explore how we search for wet spots in the solar system, what they can tell us about our home planet, and why they’re the key to making our way in the universe.
Read moreFebruary 27, 2021The Dream of Abyssinia: Two Black Aviators and EthiopiaStory
| From the Archives
In 1896, Ethiopians had turned back an Italian invasion at Adwa (Adowa), serving as an example of a Black-led country’s defiance of Europe. Taking inspiration from Ethiopia’s long history as an independent Black nation, two Black aviators—Hubert Julian and John C. Robinson—were drawn to Ethiopia by the events of 1935.