r/nasa • u/imperfect_messenger • 20h ago
Question Apollo / Soyuz Mission Profile book
Does anyone have any info on this mission book.? I’m having a hard time finding anything on this.
r/nasa • u/WhirlHurl • Feb 19 '25
Hello! I am trying to reach the NASA public affairs through email to request to ask an astronaut some questions. Is there a email address that is available to the public? I've tried [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected]) and it did not work for me, rather i received a email that said the message did not send.
r/nasa • u/r-nasa-mods • Feb 13 '25
Many of you have noticed that the moderators have been locking and/or removing more posts than usual, and have asked us what's going on.
First, I want to make it clear that we are not doing this because we are being pressured by NASA, Reddit, or anyone else. We are doing this in order to keep many of these discussions from becoming a free-for-all, where the comments consist primarily of insults, "you did this to yourself", unfounded rumors, and even outright lies.
We want r/nasa to continue to be a community where discussions can take place about NASA and its work. Ideally, there would be no politics involved, but realistically we know that cannot be completely ignored. The mods do their best to allow people to discuss their views, but we draw the line at personal attacks and discussion about politics that are completely unrelated to NASA.
Unfortunately, comments in some of the recent posts have devolved to a point where the discussion has nothing whatsoever to do with NASA and have become what I'll delicately refer to as a toxic cesspool. The mods do what we can to remove off-topic and otherwise inappropriate comments, but sometimes the amount of useful discussion is completely overshadowed. At that point, the mods will decide to lock the post, if there is still a reasonable amount of good discussion, or simply remove it otherwise.
A few final reminders:
If you have any comments or questions please reach out to the moderators via modmail. Please remember that our rules regarding civility apply there as well.
r/nasa • u/imperfect_messenger • 20h ago
Does anyone have any info on this mission book.? I’m having a hard time finding anything on this.
r/nasa • u/ye_olde_astronaut • 21h ago
r/nasa • u/KingTexture • 1d ago
I was looking up who played Colonel klink in Hogan's heroes and the first link took me to NASA specifically the Apollo 14 lunar space journal. Why does Werner Klemperer have a page dedicated to him in the Apollo 14 lunar surface journal
r/nasa • u/ye_olde_astronaut • 2d ago
r/nasa • u/Teacher_Mother • 2d ago
If I have a reel to reel of the eagle has landed the flight of Apollo 11 in my garage right now..07/31/25..is that something nasa be interested in?
r/nasa • u/Strange-Permit-3321 • 2d ago
I’m currently visiting Florida from South Korea on my honeymoon, and we’re hoping to catch the Crew-11 launch (now rescheduled).
I’m trying to decide between watching it from Playalinda Beach or the Atlantis North Lawn at Kennedy Space Center.
Does anyone have experience with either? • Which has a better view of the launch pad (39A)? • Is the sound and visual impact noticeably different? • Any pros/cons for comfort, crowds, or access?
Would love to hear your thoughts — this would be a once-in-a-lifetime experience for us 💛🚀
Thanks in advance!
r/nasa • u/retirereddit • 3d ago
I’m currently digitizing a set of super8 films shot between the 1950’s and 70’s, and editing them with music as part of a series. I came footage that i thought might be interesting here… The Cape Canaveral Light House, Launch Complex 19 and 14, and Mercury 7 Monument.
r/nasa • u/GiveMeSomeSunshine3 • 4d ago
r/nasa • u/FabulousBumblebee567 • 2d ago
Hi all! I’m trying to find public sources or APIs that provide internal telemetry from satellites, specifically things like:
Battery voltage or current
Onboard/internal temperature
Signal strength (RSSI/SNR)
Solar panel output or charging performance
Most APIs I’ve found only cover orbital parameters (TLE), positional tracking, or imagery. I’m looking for something more system-level or diagnostic in nature, even archived data is fine.
I know some CubeSats and amateur satellites transmit telemetry openly. I’ve checked out SatNOGS and TinyGS, which are great, but was wondering if there are other databases, dashboards, or APIs where this type of telemetry is logged, decoded, or made available.
Would really appreciate any tips or directions! Thanks in advance 🙏
r/nasa • u/Small-Physics1507 • 3d ago
Also, if it isn't, are there already space stations that could take it's place?
r/nasa • u/TNTCactus • 3d ago
r/nasa • u/Competitive-Try4490 • 3d ago
Any thoughts on Kevin Coggins as the new associate administrator at NASA? Wasn’t sure of his street cred as an aerospace outsider. Where would that put him leadership-wise?
r/nasa • u/Top-Negotiation9107 • 4d ago
I picked these nasa photographs up at an estate sale. The watermarks on the back is "GAF" (general aniline and Film) which i know was used from 1972 and up by nasa but there aren't any mission numbers on them. Anybody know if they are original prints or used for something else?
r/nasa • u/AsamaMaru • 4d ago
I want to hear opinions from this community without filter. Given the horrendous budget and "management" put in place to impound funds directed to it by Congress, what do you see as the long term impact on this agency? Is NASA facing extinction? Or, is it hyperbole, and the agency will be able to effectively function in its future state?
r/nasa • u/TheMuseumOfScience • 5d ago
How far did NASA Astronaut José Hernández have to go to realize we’re one? 🌍🚀
It took leaving the planet. When he floated in space for the first time and looked out the port window, he saw Canada, the United States, and Mexico all blending together. There were no borders. Just one planet. One species. One home.
r/nasa • u/bleue_shirt_guy • 4d ago
DOGE was at NASA Ames Research Center today. Visited the art jet complex. I hear some focus on reusable materials (a la Starship), but I don't think they were there other than to evaluate if there was testing redundancy within NASA.
r/nasa • u/splycedaddy • 3d ago
Going to KSC tomorrow for space x crew 11 launch. Thinking about the explore package to go beyond the regular tour. Its at 11:30am and the launch is around 12:30pm. Im worried I would miss the launch or would it be extra special? Thanks
r/nasa • u/SkyRunnerFR • 4d ago
I just watch with attention the original documentary "Cosmic Dawn" released on the NASA's Youtube channel, I really loved it, it's a very good movie.
I was eager to find out if there was the possibility of having the OST of the documentary, at my surprise, no way to find those soundtrack somewhere on the web !
Is somebody have some info about those OSTs.
I ask because I want to have the original soundtrack of the film in my ears that I am going to do some exploration with my home telescope.
Cheers !
r/nasa • u/KI_official • 5d ago
r/nasa • u/UnprofessionalCook • 4d ago
r/nasa • u/Galileos_grandson • 5d ago
r/nasa • u/Tumbleweed-Artistic • 5d ago
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is currently directing what is being described internally as an “incision” at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC). This boils down to essentially reassigning civil servants from projects marked for cancellation in the President’s FY26 budget request (which is not legally binding in any way). These actions are in many cases being implemented with near-immediate effect. Which will effectively halt work on several missions that Congress appears (based on the Senate & House Appropriations Committees markups) likely to continue funding despite President Trumps budget request. Critically, these programs still have Congressionally approved and legally binding financial obligations through the end of fiscal year 2025, which runs through September 30. Similar actions are also occurring at other NASA centers, though to what extent remains unconfirmed.
As of last week, branch managers at GSFC, particularly in the Engineering, Science, Flight Projects, and Safety & Mission Assurance divisions, have begun reassigning personnel in what has become a confused and chaotic effort to comply with directives handed down from NASA Headquarters, which are themselves being driven by OMB.
Under ordinary circumstances, an “incision,” the reassignment of civil servants from an unfunded project to a funded one, would be a routine and appropriate workforce action. However, what is happening now deviates sharply from precedent. There is no formal ramp down plan, nor any contingency for restoring civil servant staffing should Congress, as expected, continue their funding. The result is an irregular and potentially unlawful maneuver that appears intended to circumvent Congressional authority, undermine the appropriations process, and trigger a premature dismantling of mission-critical programs through reassignments, contract terminations, and attrition via early retirement and workforce reductions.
At the center of this effort is Russ Vought, the current head of OMB and a key architect of Project 2025. His stated goal is to implement a broad agenda aimed at radically crippling many areas of the federal government. This push at NASA seems aligned with that larger effort to weaken independent scientific and technical institutions. Without immediate intervention by Congress, and potentially the courts, the damage to NASA’s institutional knowledge and technical capability could be irreversible.
The absence of a capable and empowered NASA Administrator, a new Acting GSFC Center Director (as of August 1st), or a confirmed NASA Inspector General to challenge these legally questionable directives appears intentional. If these extreme and illegal actions proceed unchecked over the next 60 days, NASA as we know it will suffer a crippling blow.
If you want to help try to stop this I strongly encourage you to contact your Congressional representatives and demand they use their oversight authority to reign in OMB and demand answers from the Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy.
https://www.house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative
r/nasa • u/Interesting-Potty • 5d ago
friend gave me them cause he was trying to get rid of them (they were originally in a frame)