Housing Moved by Youngblood and Son | National Air and Space Museum https://airandspace.si.edu/collection-objects/housing-moved-youngblood-and-son/nasm_A19760490000
The son of a physics professor and a veteran of the U.S.
The son of a physics professor and a veteran of the U.S.
Darmstadt Akaflieg (a small group of aeronautical engineering students led by a professor
Our museum collection is sometimes a working one. That means that scientists come to do aviation or space research using objects in the Museum.
Kevin Lewis, vice chair and professor of earth and planetary science, Johns Hopkins
In 1935, Earhart became a visiting professor at Purdue University at the invitation
Ambitious plans for gas stations in space could extend the lives of satellites
’s an ambitious plan laden with challenges, according to Massimiliano Vasile, a professor
A small group of enthusiasts keeps World War I airplanes aloft.
materials science—and more—that one can see why his two brothers nicknamed him “Professor
A story examining the lore and enduring appeal of taildraggers.
wonderful,� says Mellor, a Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology computer science professor
A hundred years ago, astronomer Edwin Hubble revealed a universe of galaxies that existed beyond ours. His influence in astronomy continues to this day.
character with an amazing variety of interests,� says Hasan Padamsee, a retired professor
Using some of the world’s largest radio telescopes to scan the stars for signals astronomers have been listening for signs of extraterrestrial life.
structure of a formaldehyde molecule, says Linda French, one of the students and now professor
Crop-dusting was an often hazardous occupation, until a maverick entrepreneur and pilot designed the right airplanes for the job.
Piper hired Fred Weick, a Texas A&M aeronautical engineering professor, to design