In Case You Missed It: A Weekly Summary of Top Content from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center

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  July 14, 2017 
MEDIA ADVISORY
In Case You Missed It: A Weekly Summary of Top Content from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center

Week of July 10 - 14, 2017


 

NASA, Marshall Recognize Team Members at Annual Honor Awards

Celebrating our talented people and bold future, NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center recognized the accomplishments of more than 300 employees, contractors and teams who supported a variety of programs, projects and activities for Marshall and NASA in 2016-17.


 

SLS Test Hardware Loaded into NASA’s Super Guppy Aircraft

NASA engineers loaded a structural test version of the Orion Stage Adapter for NASA's Space Launch System onto NASA’s Super Guppy Aircraft at the Redstone Arsenal Airfield, this week, for delivery to Lockheed Martin in Denver. Built at Marshall, the OSA was used in integrated structural testing for the top of the SLS rocket and will be used in similar testing with NASA's Orion spacecraft.


 

Conference to Highlight Space Station Research's 'Innovation Beyond Boundaries'

Next week, Marshall payload planners will join hundreds of researchers, scientists and leaders in the aerospace industry at this year's "Innovation Beyond Boundaries" International Space Station Research and Development Conference in Washington. The #ISSRDC will explore the vast possibilities ahead for space station science investigations.


 

NASA’s Juno Spacecraft Spots Jupiter’s Great Red Spot

Images of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot reveal a tangle of dark, veinous clouds weaving their way through a massive crimson oval. The JunoCam imager aboard NASA's Juno mission snapped pictures of the most iconic feature of the solar system’s largest planetary inhabitant during this week's flyby. The images of the Great Red Spot are available on the JunoCam website.


 

Chandra Peers into a Nurturing Cloud

A new composite image using data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Telescope of W51 -- a giant molecular cloud -- is providing astronomers with an excellent opportunity to study how stars are forming in our Milky Way galaxy. W51 is one of the closest molecular clouds to Earth at a distance of about 17,000 light years.


For more information or to learn about other happenings at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, visit NASA Marshall. For past issues of the ICYMI newsletter, click here.

 

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