Posts Tagged 'langley'



Where science and art meet

The next time you’re at the Virginia Air & Space Center, check out the student art on the second floor. The collection is the work of local kids who took part in Langley’s “NASA 2009/All Around Us: From A to Z” art contest. The art is also compiled in a calendar.

Read the news release here. This year’s winners were to be recognized at a ceremony at the VASC tonight Jan. 14, with Center Diretor Lesa Roe speaking and the local news media invited.

We started the contest last year to celebrate NASA’s 50th anniversary. It was so successful that we’re trying to make it a yearly event. We found not only does the calendar contest excite the students to learn more about how NASA uses inspiration, innovation and discovery to build a better world. It also excites a lot of adults to see NASA’s missions through the eyes of the youngsters. We had about 300 entries from around Hampton Roads. That’s more than triple the number we had last year.” – Contest organizer Katrina Young

‘Apollo Fortieth’ on Facebook

Check out the new Facebook page celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Apollo landing on the moon: http://www.facebook.com/home.php

If you’re not a member of Facebook, join!

Loves me, loves me not ..

Two Mike Griffin petitions are making the rounds: one to keep him, the other to not. Presumably these will be forwarded to President-elect Barack Obama. Meanwhile, take the openLangley poll!

Langley at critical juncture

Former Langley employee Doug Dwoyer makes a call for action to position Langley in the future with a new administration coming in. Dwoyer’s call comes in an opinion piece that ran in Daily Press yesterday. View it here.

Our job as a community team is to make sure that the new administration recognizes these challenges, and recognizes that NASA and in particular NASA Langley can be major contributors to meeting the challenges. We only have a brief window to set the stage. Six months to a year from now, NASA’s direction within the Obama administration will be defined.

Dwoyer is a former associate director for center operations at Langley and currently is project director for the Hampton Roads Research Partnership and a member of the NASA Aeronautics Support Team.

Speedo suit makes Wired breakthrough list

An athlete swims toward the camera.The Speedo swimsuit that Langley helped developed has made the list of Wired’s top 10 technology breakthroughs for 2008. Check it out here. What Wired said:

Michael Phelps. 2008 Olympics. Enough said. Phelps and others were able to log faster times because of Speedo’s LZR swimsuit. It blends new materials and a dose of NASA rocket science to boost the speeds of elite swimmers — legally.

Viscous drag on a swimmer can be as much as 25 percent of the total retarding force. But Speedo’s suit, with its ultrasonically bonded seams instead of stitches, low-drag panels and a mix of polyurethane layers, can cut resistance and help swimmers move through the water faster. It also has a rigid, girdle-style structure that helps position the swimmer’s body in an optimal position. Did it have anything to do with Michael Phelps’ amazing eight Olympic gold medals? Probably not, as nearly every swimmer at the Games was wearing a Speedo suit.

Outlook: We’re hoping at least some of the technologies in the LZR will trickle down to the consumer level so we can slice through the water at the Y.

NASA top stories of 2008

Year in Review 2008Several Langley achievements made NASA’s list of “top stories” of 2008, including sharing in the Collier Trophy, helping Speedo with the LZR racer swimsuit that starred in the Summer Olympics, and the successful Mars Phoenix Lander mission.

Check out the full story here. You can also vote here for which on the list you think is the biggest NASA accomplishment of the past year.

What to do?

Daily PressDoes NASA need to wake up? Or is the agency already awake?

A Daily Press editorial maintains that bad things have happened since NASA “turned itself inside out” in response to the President’s space exploration vision. Conditions need to change to allow Langley “to better tap into the opportunities offered by the space program,” the editorial asserts, and to “reinstate aeronautics and science as national priorities, with funding to match.”

What do you think? Read the editorial here.

Checking it twice

http://www.dcgiftshop.com/Product_Images/Christmas_Ornaments/2006/2006-US-Capitol-Historical-Society.gifWith the announcement that Langley employees will NOT get a day off on inauguration day, January 20, even though our D.C. colleagues WILL, the next question is:

Will we get December 26 off?

Often the official announcement comes after everyone has already heard of it through the news media. So I checked. No news. But here are a few thoughts from FedSmith.com, a site devoted to all things federal:

There is even a rumor going around that the President has already made a decision and already signed an executive order, informing federal agencies of the fact but has not yet formally issued the order. Continue reading ‘Checking it twice’

Your 30 seconds of fame

Who are the people of NASA Langley?

A video contest has been launched to help the Center learn more about itself from all segments of the workforce: civil service, non-civil service, and students. This is your chance to tell everyone on Center why your job is important and why you love it.

The Challenge: make a 30-second video to explain what you do and why you love your job. Continue reading ‘Your 30 seconds of fame’

To the moon

Ares liftCool Ares photo …

Hardware is being fabricated at Langley prior to airlifting to Kennedy Space Center for flight test next year. Pictured is a major element of the Ares I-X Crew Module/Launch Abort System simulator. The elements will simulate the topmost parts of the Ares I-X, the rocket designed to demonstrate technologies for NASA’s next generation of crewed spacecraft. For high-resolution images click here. Credit: NASA/Sean Smith

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