Category: Tales from the Rocket Ranch

NASA’s Artemis Moon Program Honored with Musical Production

NASA’s Artemis Moon Program Honored with Musical Production

In Greek mythology, Artemis was the twin sister of Apollo. Artemis now is the name of NASA’s program to return astronauts to the Moon by 2024. In honor of Women’s History Month, musician Lindsey Stirling performed her composition, “Artemis,” on the roof of the Launch Control Center at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center.

Resupply Spacecraft Named for First African American Astronaut

Resupply Spacecraft Named for First African American Astronaut

On Feb. 15, 2020, a Northrop Grumman spacecraft was launched atop an Antares rocket from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. The Cygnus capsule, christened the “S.S. Robert H. Lawrence,” will deliver more than 7,400 pounds of cargo to the International Space Station. The name honors the first African American to be selected as an astronaut.

Brian May Breaks the Mold as Both ‘Rock Star’ and ‘Rocket Scientist’

Brian May Breaks the Mold as Both ‘Rock Star’ and ‘Rocket Scientist’

When a person is called a “rocket scientist,” it can be referring to someone who supports space exploration, or it can simply mean he or she is very intelligent. A “rock star” usually refers to a member of a successful musical band or someone highly renowned in a particular field. Dr. Brian May could be considered both.

Enhanced Apollo/Saturn V Center Takes Visitors Back to 1969

Enhanced Apollo/Saturn V Center Takes Visitors Back to 1969

The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex captures the excitement of the historic lunar landing in their revamped Apollo/Saturn V Center. This feature will focus on the new exhibits at that facility that includes a 1969 period living room recreating what life was like a half-century ago.

Early Project Mercury Media Event Ends with Astronaut Prank

Early Project Mercury Media Event Ends with Astronaut Prank

In the summer of 1969, the voice of Jack King was immortalized as he provided the countdown for the liftoff for the Apollo 11 lunar landing mission. He was selected as the first chief of Public Information at the Florida spaceport in 1960. During a news media event just prior to the flight of America’s first person in space, King was witness to a prank by one of NASA’s Project Mercury astronauts.