Voyager 1 Talks Again NSF Live + Intrepid Museum Astro Live with Orion´s Timothy Straube
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- Опубліковано 25 кві 2024
- Join us for a special episode of NSF Live. First, Sawyer and Jack will talk about the return of Voyager 1, and other spaceflight topics, and then Das and Elysia will take us through the new "Apollo: When We Went to the Moon" exhibit at the Intrepid Musem. After that, Tim Straube will take the stage at the Intrepid. He is the deputy manager of the avionics, power, and software for NASA´s Orion spacecraft.
Moderated by Intrepid Museum's Elysia Segal. Hosted by NSF's John Galloway.
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GUEST BIOS:
Dr. Timothy Straube currently serves as the deputy manager of the Avionics, Power, and Software (APS) Office for NASA’s Orion Program at the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. Dr. Straube has worked on human spaceflight missions at Johnson for 30 years, and most recently led APS Office flight readiness activities leading up to the Orion spacecraft’s successful Artemis I mission in 2022, the first human-rated mission to the Moon in over 50 years. Prior to this, Dr. Straube managed Orion’s guidance, navigation, and control (GN&C) development team for over a decade. He led flight dynamics activities for the spacecraft’s three successful flight tests: Pad Abort-1 in 2010 and Ascent Abort-2 in 2019, which both successfully demonstrated Orion's early abort capability, and Exploration Flight Test-1 (EFT-1) in 2014, which showcased Orion's automated human-rated reentry flight system. He also previously led GN&C development projects for the Space Shuttle Program, the International Space Station, and the Autonomous Landing Hazard Avoidance Technology Program.
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If you are interested in using footage captured by this stream, please review our content use policy: www.nasaspaceflight.com/conte... - Наука та технологія
Awesome NSF Live and Intrepid Museum Astro Live. Thank you Jack, Sawyer, Das, Elysia, Kevin, Jason, Sam and Dr. Straube. Yes, I would love to see more programming featuring guests and events.
Thanks to Sam for a fascinating guide round - much appreciated by us folks across the pond who can’t get there in person (… yet!)
Great live stream, big thanks to the whole NSF team, awesome work folks.
Thanks Sam and as always Das and Elysia. This was an awesome walkthrough. Definitely a long trip from here in Australia, so it was cool to see this awesome exhibit.
Went to Intrepid a couple of weeks ago. Rained all day but good day out. Growler is very good as well.
Saw this Apollo display when it came to Denver at the Museum of Nature and Science, awesome!!!
Good morning from Rome. Your're great ❤
Awesome please do more exhibits!
Good Morning from Sweden
Very cool idea, its a great place to visit. .....mmm hmm, yeah, yup.
Suggestion: Pop out most interesting segments into their stand alone video. For instance, Voyage 1 discussion. I am more prone to watch that segment that sit through 2-1/2 hours listening for it. I love your stuff, don't get me wrong, but having the attentional capacity for 2-1/2 hours means 8 hours of going back to where i was paying attention, so I can make sure I do not miss anything. If you had the major segments pulled out, that makes it much easier. A thought anyway!!
If you want the shorter format, we already have a weekly news show on Friday called This Week In Spaceflight that goes straight to the point on all news featured. This is more a discussion and debate kind of show not just news.
Voyager 1... Our Baby. Our single Cell Organism, even. 💫💖 PS. It has a "Tape" Recorder.
Little late for the party. Hello from Denmark 🇩🇰
"It has been claimed that Sagan had originally asked for permission to include "Here Comes the Sun" from the Beatles' album Abbey Road; but while the Beatles favored it, EMI opposed it and the song was not included. However, this has been refuted by Timothy Ferris, who worked on the selection with Sagan; he said the song was never even considered for inclusion."
"The first audio section contains a spoken greeting in English from then-Secretary-General of the United Nations Kurt Waldheim. The second audio section contains spoken greetings in 55 languages."
"The next audio section is devoted to the "sounds of Earth" that include: "Music of the Spheres" - Johannes Kepler's Harmonices Mundi, Volcanoes, Earthquake, Thunder, Mud Pots, Wind, Rain, Surf, Crickets, Frogs, Birds, Hyena, Elephant, Whale, Chimpanzee, Wind, Wild Dog, Heartbeat, Footsteps, Laughter (Sagan's)..."
"Following the section on the sounds of Earth, there is an eclectic 90-minute selection of music from many cultures, including Eastern and Western classics. The selections include:" Folk songs from around the world, 3 different Bach recordings, Beethoven appears twice, Igor Stravinsky, Mozart, Chuck Berry, Blind Willie Johnson & Louie Armstrong performing Melancholy Blues by Marty Bloom and Walter Melrose.
They included instructions on how to play the gold record.
No live chat replay?
Stubbeh Nozzle!!!!
👍
How long from Earth is Voyager 1 now?
15.1 billion miles
Frank🇩🇪👍
there is nothing about voyager here just to get the people to come in hahaha .
Give me ur gas pls I’m poor from USA 🇺🇸 pls…