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| Found 182 matches. | << 1 - 25 of 182 >> |
| Rank | Headline | Author | Published6 | Section |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Space station dodges controversial junk For the first time in five years, the international space station changed course on Wednesday to avoid a piece of space junk — in this case, satellite debris that the Russians have insisted wasn't there. | Oberg,James | Aug 28, 2008 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Sources: Iran tried but failed to launch satellite Iranian officials say a rocket launch last weekend was merely a test, but U.S. military intelligence officials now see it as a failed attempt to put a satellite in orbit. | Oberg,James | Aug 19, 2008 | Space | |
| Next spacewalk will have an explosive twist Two spacewalkers are due to take on the unprecedented task of removing an explosive bolt from a Soyuz craft in space and bringing it inside the international space station. | Oberg,James | Jun 26, 2008 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Why NASA watches out for true UFOs Friday’s brief orbital anxiety about threats from an unidentified object seen out the window of space shuttle Discovery underscore why NASA has always been interested in what can justifiably be called UFOs. | Oberg,James | Jun 13, 2008 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Space station struggles with balky toilet Just days before the planned delivery of the international space station's largest laboratory, its crew is facing a much more down-to-Earth problem: a stopped-up toilet. | Oberg,James | May 27, 2008 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Martian cliffhanger resolved at last The key phase of the Phoenix Mars Lander's descent to the Red Planet's surface came when the probe turns its engines on — and lasted until it turned them off. | Oberg,James | May 23, 2008 | Mars | |
| How to crack a case from the UFO files As more information becomes available from international "UFO files," investigators are able to take a second look at some celebrated cases. Consider the mystery of the 1984 Minsk UFO sighting. | Oberg,James | May 15, 2008 | Space | |
| Space crew’s hard landing raises hard questions Saturday's rough landing for a crew returning from the international space station raises questions about the Russian space effort's competence going forward. | Oberg,James | Apr 21, 2008 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Satellite turns 50 years old ... in orbit! The oldest surviving artificial Earth satellite, Vanguard 1, turned 50 years old on Monday — and some experts are talking about bringing it back down to Earth in what would be another history-making feat. | Oberg,James | Mar 17, 2008 | Space | |
| Upgraded space robot will lend a hand The international space station's crew will have an upgraded robotic assistant that is far more valuable than the sum of its parts: the station’s existing robot arm, plus the Dextre robotic hand assembly brought up on the shuttle Endeavour. | Oberg,James | Mar 14, 2008 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Five myths about the satellite smash-up Last week's Pentagon operation to bring down a falling spy satellite may have been widely termed a "shootdown" of precision accuracy — but the reality is more complex, and much messier. | Oberg,James | Feb 27, 2008 | Space | |
| Heading off a toxic iceberg from space What led the Pentagon to come up with an unorthodox plan to shoot a missile at a falling satellite? It was the realization that a toxic iceberg might be headed for Earth. By NBC News' James Oberg. | Oberg,James | Feb 14, 2008 | Space | |
| Q&A: Destroying a broken spy satellite Here are some answers to questions stemming from the Pentagon's plan to shoot down a broken spy satellite expected to hit the Earth the first week of March. | Oberg,James | Feb 14, 2008 | Space | |
| Russia has the corner on guns in space While diplomats debate whether weapons should be banned in space, Russian space crews hang onto their handguns. Should the space station be declared a gun-free zone? By NBC News' James Oberg. | Oberg,James | Feb 12, 2008 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Shuttle flight rules get lost in translation Why does it make sense to consider changing the flight rules for launching the shuttle? It all depends on what the meaning of the word "rule" is. By NBC News' James Oberg. | Oberg,James | Dec 07, 2007 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Spacesuit smoke alarm threatens NASA plans NASA’s already-tight schedule for assembly of the international space station is under new threat, this time because of a spacesuit smoke alarm. | Oberg,James | Nov 13, 2007 | Human Spaceflight | |
| How a dog blazed the trail for life in space Fifty years ago, the Soviet space effort sent the world's first animal into orbit, and the impact of that endeavor went far beyond the fate of one mixed-breed dog. By James Oberg, NBC News space analyst. | Oberg,James | Nov 02, 2007 | Space | |
| China’s space effort undergoing a sea change As China's Chang'e orbiter begins its long march to the moon, space officials back on Earth are laying plans for an elaborate ocean-based space infrastructure. | Oberg,James | Oct 31, 2007 | Space | |
| Sputnik witnesses saw failure, then success Few people actually saw Sputnik and its rocket take off — and when they did, they feared at first that the launch was a failure. The world's first-ever orbital liftoff provided a new perspective on flight. | Oberg,James | Oct 04, 2007 | Space | |
| Lessons from the Sputnik generation Fifty years after Sputnik, the "Greatest Generation" of space exploration has lessons to teach, not just for future NASA engineers but for future-looking societies as well. NBC News space analyst James Oberg on the real Right Stuff. | Oberg,James | Oct 03, 2007 | Space | |
| Spacecraft’s ion drive gets its day in the sun After suffering dark days, NASA's Dawn asteroid probe and its high-tech propulsion system are finally having their “day in the sun.” | Oberg,James | Sep 27, 2007 | Space | |
| Satellite to test special deliveries from space Russia’s Foton science satellite will include an innovative space transportation experiment that is testing a theoretically cheaper method of returning small cargo from the international space station. | Oberg,James | Sep 13, 2007 | Space | |
| Human failings serve as NASA wake-up call Over the past few months, space engineers have been forcibly reminded that booster seals and wing panels aren't the only things that can crack in space: Humans can, too. | Oberg,James | Aug 07, 2007 | Human Spaceflight | |
| Phoenix trip to Mars offers suspense galore NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander bears the mythical moniker of the bird “reborn in flames” for good reason. It’s not the probe itself that has risen from the dead, but its hardware design and its operational philosophy. | Oberg,James | Aug 02, 2007 | Mars | |
| Space station glitch puzzles the experts The failure of all six main control computers on the international space station's Russian segment has baffled space engineers, and temporary repairs aren’t enough. By NBC News space analyst James Oberg. | Oberg,James | Jun 14, 2007 | Human Spaceflight | |
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