Fly in Space
Title | Fly in Space PDF eBook |
Author | Aashima Freidog |
Publisher | Pratham Books |
Pages | 17 |
Release | |
Genre | Juvenile Fiction |
ISBN |
Two fruit flies are born on Earth and raised in space. Story Attribution: ‘Fly in Space’ is written by Aashima Freidog. © Pratham Books, 2018. Some rights reserved. Released under CC BY 4.0 license. (http://creativecommons. org/licenses/by/4.0/) Other Credits: This book was first published on StoryWeaver by Pratham Books. The development of this book has been supported by Oracle. Guest Editor: Nandita Jayaraj, Art Director: Kaveri Gopalakrishnan.
How NASA Learned to Fly in Space
Title | How NASA Learned to Fly in Space PDF eBook |
Author | David Michael Harland |
Publisher | Collector's Guide Publishing |
Pages | 300 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Nature |
ISBN |
The social context in which NASA learned to fly in space, with an explicit mandate to reach the moon set against a tight deadline, is described in this historical analysis.
Today I Will Fly!
Title | Today I Will Fly! PDF eBook |
Author | Mo Willems |
Publisher | Elephant and Piggie |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2012 |
Genre | Children's stories |
ISBN | 9781406338485 |
These are one of a series of delightfully humorous award-winning tales for beginner readers from an internationally acclaimed author-illustrator. Gerald is careful. Piggie is not. Piggie cannot help smiling. Gerald can. Gerald worries so that Piggie does not have to. Gerald and Piggie are best friends. In "Today I will Fly!" Piggie wants to fly. But Gerald knows that she cannot - or can she?
Fly Guy Presents: Insects
Title | Fly Guy Presents: Insects PDF eBook |
Author | Tedd Arnold |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2015 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Learn all about insects with Fly Guy and Buzz!
If I Were an Astronaut
Title | If I Were an Astronaut PDF eBook |
Author | Eric Braun |
Publisher | Capstone |
Pages | 14 |
Release | 2010 |
Genre | Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | 1404855343 |
Discusses activities astronauts do while they're in space.
Come Fly with Us
Title | Come Fly with Us PDF eBook |
Author | Melvin Croft |
Publisher | U of Nebraska Press |
Pages | 456 |
Release | 2019-02 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 149621224X |
2020 Space Hipsters Prize for Best Book in Astronomy, Space Exploration, or Space History Come Fly with Us is the story of an elite group of space travelers who flew as members of many space shuttle crews from pre-Challenger days to Columbia in 2003. Not part of the regular NASA astronaut corps, these professionals known as "payload specialists" came from a wide variety of backgrounds and were chosen for an equally wide variety of scientific, political, and national security reasons. Melvin Croft and John Youskauskas focus on this special fraternity of spacefarers and their individual reflections on living and working in space. Relatively unknown to the public and often flying only single missions, these payload specialists give the reader an unusual perspective on the experience of human spaceflight. The authors also bring to light NASA's struggle to integrate the wide-ranging personalities and professions of these men and women into the professional astronaut ranks. While Come Fly with Us relates the experiences of the payload specialists up to and including the Challenger tragedy, the authors also detail the later high-profile flights of a select few, including Barbara Morgan, John Glenn (who returned to space at the age of seventy-seven), and Ilan Ramon of Israel aboard Columbia on its final, fatal flight, STS-107.
Fly Me to the Moon
Title | Fly Me to the Moon PDF eBook |
Author | Edward Belbruno |
Publisher | Princeton University Press |
Pages | 172 |
Release | 2013-09-12 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 1400849195 |
When a leaf falls on a windy day, it drifts and tumbles, tossed every which way on the breeze. This is chaos in action. In Fly Me to the Moon, Edward Belbruno shows how to harness the same principle for low-fuel space travel--or, as he puts it, "surfing the gravitational field." Belbruno devised one of the most exciting concepts now being used in space flight, that of swinging through the cosmos on the subtle fluctuations of the planets' gravitational pulls. His idea was met with skepticism until 1991, when he used it to get a stray Japanese satellite back on course to the Moon. The successful rescue represented the first application of chaos to space travel and ushered in an emerging new field. Part memoir, part scientific adventure story, Fly Me to the Moon gives a gripping insider's account of that mission and of Belbruno's personal struggles with the science establishment. Along the way, Belbruno introduces readers to recent breathtaking advances in American space exploration. He discusses ways to capture and redirect asteroids; presents new research on the origin of the Moon; weighs in on discoveries like 2003 UB313 (now named Eris), a dwarf planet detected in the far outer reaches of our solar system--and much more. Grounded in Belbruno's own rigorous theoretical research but written for a general audience, Fly Me to the Moon is for anybody who has ever felt moved by the spirit of discovery.