![nasa launch nasa launch](https://twistedsifter.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/nasa-orion-launch-hq-high-res-photos-9.jpg)
Elizabeth Conley, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Show More Show Less 13 of25Īn Orion capsule on display at the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory during a press tour of the Johnson Space Center for Artemis 1 on Friday, Aug. Buoyancy Laboratory at the Johnson Space Center for Artemis 1 on Thursday, Aug. Real-time video of divers working on a simulated moon in the Neutral. Elizabeth Conley, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Show More Show Less 12 of25 Artificial lunar sand and rocks were added to the bottom of the pool, right, next to an area that simulates the International Space Station. Elizabeth Conley/Staff photographer Show More Show Less 11 of25ĭivers test out the new training terrain at the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory during a press tour of the Johnson Space Center for Artemus 1 on Friday, Aug. âI canât wait for us to get back to the moon,â said Mosie. Scientists Juliane Gross, left, and Andrea Mosie display lunar rocks and dirt at the Johnson Space Center during a tour in preparation for Artemis 1 on Friday, Aug. Elizabeth Conley/Staff photographer Show More Show Less 10 of25 Holly Ridings, talks about the importance of NASAâs past at the Apollo Flight Control Room, and the excitement of return to the moon and preparing for Mars on Friday, Aug. Elizabeth Conley, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Show More Show Less 9 of25 Holly Ridings, deputy manager for NASA’s Gateway, talks about the HALO portion of the Gateway, as she stands in a prototype during a press tour of the Johnson Space Center for Artemis 1 on Thursday, Aug. Elizabeth Conley/Staff photographer Show More Show Less 8 of25 Elizabeth Conley/Staff photographer Show More Show Less 7 of25 A prototype of astronauts flight suit on display at the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility at Johnson Space Center on Friday, Aug. Facility at the Johnson Space Center on Friday, Aug. Elizabeth Conley/Staff photographer Show More Show Less 6 of25 Students on tour peak into the Space Vhicle Mockup.
![nasa launch nasa launch](https://publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/sts-135-4.jpg)
Elizabeth Conley/Staff photographer Show More Show Less 5 of25Īstronaut Jasmin Moghbeli talks about training during a tour of the Johnson Space Center in preparation for Artemis 1 on Friday, Aug. Elizabeth Conley/Staff photographer Show More Show Less 4 of25 The interior of Orion capsule mockup at the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility at the Johnson Space Center on Friday, Aug. Elizabeth Conley, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Show More Show Less 3 of25 An Orion capsule mockup at the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility at the Johnson Space Center on Friday, Aug. Holly Ridings, deputy manager for NASA’s Gateway, talks about the HALO portion of the Gateway during a press tour of the Johnson Space Center for Artemis 1 on Thursday, Aug. Elizabeth Conley, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Show More Show Less 2 of25 In picking a time to launch, space engineers and scientists have to consider quite a number of things.Holly Ridings, deputy manager for NASA’s Gateway, talks about the HALO portion of the Gateway, as she stands in a prototype during a press tour of the Johnson Space Center for Artemis 1 on Thursday, Aug. Even if your paper balls were real basketballs or baseballs, you'd have a lot of trouble. Now, try tossing the balls into the basket on the ground as you go around.Īdding the motion makes it a lot harder to hit your target, doesn't it? Now imagine the target is on another spinning merry-go-round on the other side of the playground. Now, leaving the container of balls on the merry-go-round, hop off, push it to get it going slowly (or have someone else push it), then hop back on. Without moving the merry-go-round, try tossing a few balls into the basket on the ground. Then, step up on the merry-go-round with your container of balls. Place the basket on the ground about 3 or 4 meters (9 to 12 feet) from the merry-go-round. (Not the kind with horses, but the kind you push around then hop on and ride.) Take the paper balls (in their container) and the basket to the nearest park or playground that has a merry-go-round. Put the balls in a bucket or bag to make them easy to carry.įind another empty container like a bucket or wastebasket or laundry basket to be the "basket." Or you can make small "paper basketballs" by tightly wadding up pieces of notebook-sized paper. They can be tennis balls, softballs, whiffle balls, golf balls, or bean bags. If you don't think this is a hard problem, try this: