fbpx No need to be a rocket scientist to launch a spacecraft | Science in the net

No need to be a rocket scientist to launch a spacecraft

Primary tabs

Read time: 1 min

With NASA’s Rocket Science 101, a new game designed for computers and iPad users by NASA, you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to launch a spacecraft.
As you take the Rocket Science 101 challenge, you can learn more about thrilling missions and the various components of the launch vehicles, how they are configured and how they work together to successfully launch a NASA spacecraft.

NASA’s Launch Services Program (LSP) does the same things for real rockets and exciting spacecraft missions every day.

[video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPOilR0X_J4]

LSP is located at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida and acts as a broker to match unmanned payloads with specific launch vehicles for customers to ensure mission success. The principal objectives of LSP are to provide safe, reliable, cost-effective and on-schedule processing, mission analysis and spacecraft integration and launch services for NASA and NASA-sponsored payloads.

Popular Internet vlogger Hank Green of Vlogbrothers expounds on how NASA's new Space Launch System will help scratch an item off his "bucket list" for humanity:

[video:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wtN9FF_jn8]

Previews of the app:

101 NASA

101 NASA

101 NASA

101 NASA

Premio giovani ricercatrici e ricercatori


Il Gruppo 2003 per la ricerca scientifica indice la quarta edizione del "Premio giovani ricercatrici e ricercatori edizione 2025" per promuovere l'attività di ricerca e richiamare l'attenzione delle istituzioni e dell'opinione pubblica sulle nuove generazioni di scienziate e scienziati.



prossimo articolo

Europe’s Freedom of Research: €100 Billion for ReBrain Europe

Una rivisitazione dell'immagine dello zio Sam con la scritta "I want you" e il volto di Ursula von der Leyen

A European programme could attract a counter-exodus of scientific talent from the United States, revitalising our research institutions.

In the 1930s, the disastrous Nazi-fascist policies induced an unprecedented exodus of at least 15,000 intellectuals - scientists and artists, Jews and non-Jews - to the United States. See. e.g., the historical accounts in Adorno, Fleming, & Bailyn: The Intellectual Migration.