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Space Issue
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Photo Gallery: Humans in Space
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Photo Gallery: Exploration
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Photo Gallery: Search for Origins
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Humans in Space
Spaceflight is full of small details, inventiveness, contingencies, serendipity. To make it work, sometimes you have to fly by the seat of your pants.
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Photograph by NASA
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Photograph by Mark Thiessen; model courtesy NASA/National Space Science Data Center
http://pictopia.com/perl/ptp/natgeo?photo_name=2232538
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Photograph by NASA
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Photograph by NASA
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Photograph by Asif Siddiqi
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Photograph by NASA, courtesy Kipp Teague
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Photograph by NASA
/2008/11/space-special/img1/08-moon-rover-475.jpg
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Photograph by NASA
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Photograph by Scott Andrews
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Photograph by NASA/Johnson Space Center (JSC)
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Photograph by NASA/JSC
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Photograph by NASA
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Photograph by Bill Ingalls, NASA
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Photograph by NASA
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Photograph by NASA
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Photograph by Ingo Wagner, EADS Astrium
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Photograph by Qin Xian'an, State Satellite Control Center
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Photograph by Sean Smith, NASA
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Photograph by Bigelow Aerospace
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Photograph by Virgin Galactic
WhiteKnightTwo carrier aircraft on July 28, 2008. It is designed to carry
SpaceShipTwo
(suspended below the aircraft in the computer simulation above), two pilots, and six passengers to a launch point at about 50,000 feet. When released, the craft will rocket under its own power to an altitude of about 68 miles. Passengers will have an astronaut's view of Earth and for a few minutes float free with the feeling of weightlessness. When the craft begins to descend, they will buckle up as gravity returns in full. Funded by Sir Richard Branson and designed by legendary aeronautical engineer Burt Rutan, the system follows the success of
SpaceShipOne,
which won the ten-million-dollar Ansari X Prize in 2004 by twice reaching suborbital space within two weeks. A ride will cost $200,000, and $20,000 deposits are now being accepted. Frequent-flier miles on Branson's Virgin America airline can be applied.]]>