Showing 1781 - 1790 of 1795

31st Photo Reconnaissance Squadron, May 6, 1944

June 05, 2009

Shooting the Beach

Story | From the Archives

May 6th, 1944 - one month to the day before D-Day - German troops scatter for safety as Lt. Albert Lanker of the 31st Photo Reconnaissance Squadron flies fast and very low over the beach in "Outlaw", his F-5 Lightning (a variant of the Lockheed P-38 fighter). Lanker's job was to photograph the beach obstructions on the Normandy coast for the planners of the massive invasion; it was only his third mission. Jobs of this sort were called "dicing" missions, because the pilot, flying low (and unarmed) was dicing with death every time he flew.

Star Trek Starship "Enterprise" Model Restoration

June 04, 2009

Restoration of the Starship Enterprise

Story | Conserving "Enterprise"

The original studio model of the Starship Enterprise used in the television series "Star Trek" came to the Smithsonian Institution thirty-five years ago, donated by Paramount Studios in 1974. 

Large white sign reading Astroland in red letters covered in light bulbs.

June 02, 2009

Selecting the Astroland Star

Story

A Smithsonian Institution curator whom I greatly admire once said that collecting objects for a museum is a bit like standing next to a river with a bucket.  The curator’s task is to gather examples that explain what is important about something (in this analogy, a river), but the curator can only take what fits in the bucket.  How do you capture the essence of something large and complex with a sample that is small enough to be preserved and displayed?

Baker on Jupiter Model

May 29, 2009

Able and Baker

Story | At the Museum

Baker, a squirrel monkey, launched into space on a sub-orbital flight, along with a rhesus monkey named Able, on May 28, 1959.

A studio model of the Enterprise.

May 28, 2009

Are You a Star Trek-ophile?

Story

A curator reflects on Star Trek

May 22, 2009

It's a Wrap!

Story

Maybe it was director Shawn Levy’s dimpled grin as he talked about featuring the Smithsonian in his new movie. Or perhaps it was producer Tom Hammel’s description of how they planned to reunite Amelia Earhart with her beloved Lockheed Vega in the Museum. In any case, when the crew from Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian first met with us, I had a sense this project was going to be fun.

Space Shuttle Atlantis, whch is attached to a large rocket, launches from the Kennedy Space Center

May 18, 2009

The challenge of exhibiting "space"

Story

Watching the broadcast of the Space Shuttle Atlantis lifting off into the blue sky last week brought back memories of a research trip to the Kennedy Space Center last fall. National Air and Space Museum staff members are hard at work on a new exhibition about the history of the space shuttle era and the International Space Station.The trip included behind-the-scenes tours of various facilities at the Center and an up-close look at launch pad 39A with an elevator ride to 195 feet and a peek inside the entry hatch of Atlantis.

April 09, 2009

The Mutual Concerns of Air and Space Museums

Story

Every spring, the National Air and Space Museum hosts a conference for other air and space museums to discuss our "mutual concerns." The conference gathers representatives of over one hundred such museums.

April 07, 2009

Climate Change and Spaceflight: Is There A Connection?

Story | At the Museum

I was struck by the relationship between climate change and spaceflight while rereading lately Jared Diamond’s fascinating 2004 book, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. The broad premise of Diamond’s book is that societies have collapsed many times in the past and that we may understand how and why this occurred.

A daguerreotype image showing a large balloon being inflated.

March 30, 2009

On This Spot ...

Story

The millions of visitors who pass through the doors of the National Air and Space Museum each year come to see the real thing, the actual air and space craft that shaped history – from the world’s first airplane to the back-up hardware for the latest robot spacecraft on its way to explore another world.