A bicycle ride through the landmarks of Kennedy Space Center marked the start of the center's Combined Federal Campaign.
NASA and LEGO have joined forces to inspire students to learn more math and science.
The crew of STS-133 is taking along dozens of items to mark the last space voyage of Discovery.
Kennedy Space Center's timing crew keeps a sharp eye on the launch countdown clock.
The Nobel laureate leading the AMS project expects the instrument to reveal fundamental answers about the universe and raise new questions.
Team members help keep liftoff preps on schedule and give final countdown instructions to astronauts.
The Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test has taken place at Kennedy Space Center since 1981 preparing the space shuttle crew for launch day.
The solid dependability of the crawlers serves the shuttle program to the end.
In Shuttle Launch Director Mike Leinbach's office overlooking Firing Room 4 of the Launch Control Center, his emotions have inspired several beautiful works of art.
A team of rocket scientists developed a plan using emerging technology to build a cutting edge horizontal launcher.
For the first time in nearly 50 years of American human spaceflight, Kennedy Space Center could be at the forefront of designing, developing, demonstrating and flying human-rated vehicles.
A whole new set of firsts for NASA and Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Kennedy Space Center's Launch Equipment Test Facility (LETF) is an engineer's paradise.
Kennedy looks to the future for Pad 39A to support heavy-lift, commercial crew or other launch vehicles.
The logistics module known as Leonardo is on its way to a new assignment in space.
A new experiment designed to reveal the origin and structure of the universe is preparing for launch at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
"Star Wars" actors and fans push NASA to develop some technological favorites from the movies.
The next generation in docking and rendezvous technology will make its debut early next year during the STS-134 mission.
Engineers at Kennedy Space Center have updated the communications backpack for this year's research in the Arizona desert.
Engineers at NASA's Kennedy and Johnson space centers have drawn up plans to get Robonaut into space safely.