Aeronautics Archives – NASA https://www.nasa.gov/media-tags/aeronautics/
the 5.2% scale, semi-span version of the High Lift Common Research Model for wind tunnel
the 5.2% scale, semi-span version of the High Lift Common Research Model for wind tunnel
Bringing back memories of NASA’s early successes, NASA’s „meatball“ logo dates back to 1959, when the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics became NASA.
In July 1958, Modarelli participated in a tour at the Ames Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel
The photograph from 1959 shows the Project Mercury Altitude Wind Tunnel Gimbaling
Celebrating its 45th anniversary this month, NASA’s Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP) was the first time that spacecraft from two different countries, the U.S.
or lower the pressure between 0.34 and 0.68 atmospheres when moving through its tunnel
Standing 525 feet tall and containing 130 million cubic feet of interior space, the iconic Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at Kennedy Space Center in Florida
“To prevent the formation of a wind tunnel in the transfer aisle during high winds
The conclusion of the space shuttle program brought to a close an era that opened in the high desert of Southern California almost a half century earlier when
After the poor results, the M2-F1 was taken to the Ames Research Center for wind tunnel
As NASA’s work grows ever more ambitious, the amount of data that needs crunching expands with its goals. High-performance computing power is necessary to
Running all the necessary tests using physical models in a wind tunnel would hardly
2011 Associate Administrator (AA) Awards Honorees
Jonathan Lichtwardt and Eric Paciano, who played major roles in the successful wind tunnel
On March 3, 1915, the United States Congress created the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA). Although the NACA’s founding took place just over
NASA The Variable Density Tunnel at Langley.
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