SPACE EXPLORATION - Filestore.scouting

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SpaceExploration. Friedman, 2002.Lee, Wayne. To Rise From Earth:An Easy-to-Understand Guideto Spaceflight, 2nd ed. CheckmarkBooks, 2000.Mullane, R. Mike. Do Your Ears Pop inSpace? And 500 Other SurprisingQuestions About Space Travel. JohnWiley & Sons, 1997.BooksReich, Tony, editor. Space Shuttle:The First 20 Years—the Astronauts’Experiences in Their Own Words. DKPublishing, 2002.Chaikin, Andrew, and James A. Lovell.Space. Carlton, 2009.Sagan, Carl, and Carol Sagan. Pale BlueDot. Random House, 1997.Dethloff, Henry C., and Ronald A.Schorn. Voyager’s Grand Tour: Tothe Outer Planets and Beyond.Konecky & Konecky, 2009.Voigt, Gregory, and Alwyn T. Cohall.Space Exploration Projects for YoungScientists. Scholastic, 1995.92SPACE EXPLORATION

.Space Exploration ResourcesOrganizations and WebsitesAmerican Institute of Aeronauticsand AstronauticsTelephone: 800-639-2422Website: http://www.aiaa.orgEuropean Space AgencyWebsite: http://www.esa.int“Europe’s gateway to space” has 19member countries, including France,Germany, and the United Kingdom.Galileo Legacy SiteWebsite: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/galileoGoddard Space Flight CenterWebsite: http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddardThe center is “home to the nation’slargest organization of combined scientists, engineers, and technologists thatbuild spacecraft, instruments, and newtechnology to study Earth, the Sun, oursolar system, and the universe.”NASA Image GalleriesWebsite: https://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/The NASA image galleries boast a collection of more than a thousand images“of significant historical interest.”Jet Propulsion Laboratory4800 Oak Grove DrivePasadena, CA 91109Telephone: 818-354-4321Website: http://www.jpl.nasa.govThe JPL is considered NASA’s leading“center for robotic exploration of thesolar system.”Johnson Space CenterSpace Center Houston1601 NASA ParkwayHouston, TX 77058Telephone: 281-244-2100JSC website: lSCH website: http://www.spacecenter.orgKennedy Space CenterTelephone: 321-867-5000Website: lMarshall Space Flight CenterWebsite: mlNational Aeronautics and SpaceAdministrationTelephone: 202-358-0001Website: http://www.nasa.govNASA’s website has a bounty of information about space exploration forstudents of all ages.Opportunities at NASA:http://nasajobs.nasa.govAstronaut Selection Program:http://astronauts.nasa.govSkyWatch applet to track satellite sightings including the International SpaceStation: : http://spinoff.nasa.govNational Association of RocketryToll-free telephone: 800-262-4872Website: http://www.nar.orgThe world’s oldest and largest sportrocketry organization. Visit the websiteto find the club nearest you.National Space SocietyTelephone: 202-429-1600Website: http://www.nss.orgSPACE EXPLORATION93

Space Exploration Resources.Planetary SocietyTelephone: 626-793-5100Website: http://www.planetary.orgSmithsonian National Air andSpace MuseumIndependence Avenue at Sixth Street, SWWashington, DC 20560Telephone: 202-633-1000Website: http://airandspace.si.eduTechnology Student AssociationToll-free telephone: 888-860-9010Website: http://www.tsaweb.orgTSA provides programs for middleand high school students interestedin the technology.AcknowledgmentsThe Boy Scouts of America thanksthe National Space Society of NorthTexas and the Austin (Texas) SpaceFrontier Society for their hard workand diligence in updating the SpaceExploration merit badge pamphlet.The NSS is a nonprofit, international,educational organization dedicatedto the creation of a free spacefaringcivilization. We are especially gratefulto the following individuals for theirinvolvement with this pamphlet. Louis Mazza, a longtime spaceadvocate and historian. Mr. Mazzaserved as chair of the editingcommittee formed to update the2004 edition of this pamphlet andalso was the primary writer for thespace history section. Tracy Benninger, physicist andgraduate of the University of Texas atDallas in space science. She contributed to the chapter called “The WayThings Work.”94SPACE EXPLORATION Carol Johnson, physicist, spaceadvocate, and aerospace systemsengineer. She wrote the sectionsabout the space shuttle and the ISS,and contributed to the overall editingand reviewing of the manuscript. Curtis Kling, a software systemsengineer, is the club’s newslettereditor. He wrote the section on theunmanned planetary mission. Kenneth Murphy, president of theNational Space Society of NorthTexas, provided a thorough reviewof the entire pamphlet for the 2013revised edition. Terry O’Hanlon, an electricaltechnician for Raytheon and a spaceadvocacy writer, focused his energieson the chapter called “Careers inSpace Exploration.” Abigail Plemmons, a space scientist, contributed to the chapter called“The Way Things Work.” Mark Plemmons, a physicist in thesemiconductor business, contributedto the chapter called “The WayThings Work.” John Strickland Jr., senior analyst III for the Texas Department ofTransportation (Information SystemsDivision). He wrote the sectionsabout space habitats on the Moonand Mars and also contributed to thesection on why we explore space.

Space Exploration merit badge pamphlet.) Identify and explain the following rocket parts. (a) Body tube (b) Engine mount (c) Fins (d) Igniter (e) Launch lug (f) Nose cone (g) Payload (h) Recovery system (i) Rocket engine 4. Discuss and demonstr

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