Click on the different parts of the STS-128 mission patch to learn about the mission and the crew.
As the shuttle program nears its end, Discovery delivers supplies for a new era on the International Space Station.
Up-and-coming scientists combine creative thinking and NASA data to earn Thacher Scholars awards.
Trace our understanding of the universe during the last 100 years with six posters resembling newspaper front pages.
A new music video aims to communicate the science of climate change and raise awareness of the issue.
Assemble a Delta II or Atlas V rocket from main engine to payload fairing!
Student interns in NASA’s INSPIRE program are learning first-hand about the process of flight testing experimental aircraft this summer at NASA Dryden.
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Move Space Kid from platform to platform and intercept knowledge about the STS-127 space shuttle mission.
In observance of the 40th anniversary of the first human landing on the moon, audio from the entire Apollo 11 mission will be replayed at exactly the same time and date it was broadcast in 1969.
On July 16, 2009, you are invited to climb aboard Apollo 11 and travel to the moon. The experience will be a real-time visual and audio recreation of the history mission and will last four days.
Endeavour's crew will deliver the last components of the International Space Station’s Japanese Kibo laboratory module.
Do you have what it takes to design and build an experiment to be conducted in a NASA research drop tower? Proposals are due on Nov. 2, 2009.
High school students address the challenges of supersonic flight.
Kara Karpman used her math skills to conduct research in two NASA student opportunity programs.
Nearly blind since age 11, Robert Shelton uses sound to make science and math more accessible to the visually impaired.
The results of the second annual NASA Lunar Art Contest are out-of-this-world productions from high school and college students from around the globe.
Design a small supersonic airliner with a cruise speed of Mach 1.6 to 1.8, a design range of 4,000 nautical miles, a payload of 35-70 passengers, with fuel efficiency of three-passenger miles per pound of fuel and a takeoff field length of less than 10,000 feet. And the airliner should produce less noise. Ready? Go.
NASA Glenn engineers teach students the physics of spaceflight at Ohio amusement park.
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Follow NASA Education writer Heather Smith as she blogs about going weightless in a microgravity aircraft.
A venture between NASA and Girl Scouts gives a California teenager her wings.