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Total de Resultados: 31

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20231024_zaa_p138_017 October 24, 2023, Patuxent River, MD, United States: A Royal Navy aircraft handler watches a U.S Marine Corps F-35B Lightning II stealth fighter aircraft performs a shipborne rolling vertical landing on the flight deck of the Royal Navy Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales during developmental test phase 3 flight trials, October 24, 2023 off the coast of Maryland, USA. (Credit Image: © Michael Jackson/U.S. Navy/Planet Pix/Zuma Press/Fotoarena Wire)
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20230808_zia_c218_016 August 8, 2023, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States: NASAâ??s Commander Moonikin Campos, a manikin that flew on the Artemis I flight test beyond the Moon wearing the OCSS (Orion Crew Survival System) spacesuit has been sledding while going through a unique series of testing as a crash test dummy. .The tests are informing engineersâ?? understanding of what the experience of flying inside the agencyâ??s Orion spacecraft will be like on crewed missions to the Moon beginning with Artemis II..The OCSS suit will be worn by Artemis astronauts during the most dynamic phases of spaceflight: launch and re-entry through Earthâ??s atmosphere and landing. On Artemis I, Moonikin Camposâ?? seat was also equipped with sensors to record acceleration and vibration throughout the mission..Now back on Earth, the manikin's latest stop was at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where engineers put him through acceleration sled testing to simulate contingency landings..Moonikin Campos was named after NASA engineer Arturo Campos, who was instrumental in returning the Apollo 13 crew safely to Earth..NASA teams worked alongside U.S. Air Force experts to better understand how the OCSS suit and Orion seat performed in extreme acceleration movements astronauts could experience during launch and in space. These findings will help improve suit, helmet, and seat design for future Artemis missions..â??With this test, Commander Moonikin Campos has continued his service to the crew, to ensure their safe return home, very much fitting with the legacy of his namesake,â? said Dustin Gohmert, OCSS project manager at NASAâ??s Johnson Space Center in Houston..The sled system at Wright-Patterson is hundreds of feet long and made of steel and concrete. An Orion spacecraft seat was mounted to the sled device and launched Moonikin Campos with accelerations up to 19g, 19 times a normal gravity force. A series of lights enabled engineers to clearly (Cr
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20230808_zia_c218_015 August 8, 2023, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States: NASAâ??s Commander Moonikin Campos, a manikin that flew on the Artemis I flight test beyond the Moon wearing the OCSS (Orion Crew Survival System) spacesuit has been sledding while going through a unique series of testing as a crash test dummy. .The tests are informing engineersâ?? understanding of what the experience of flying inside the agencyâ??s Orion spacecraft will be like on crewed missions to the Moon beginning with Artemis II..The OCSS suit will be worn by Artemis astronauts during the most dynamic phases of spaceflight: launch and re-entry through Earthâ??s atmosphere and landing. On Artemis I, Moonikin Camposâ?? seat was also equipped with sensors to record acceleration and vibration throughout the mission..Now back on Earth, the manikin's latest stop was at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where engineers put him through acceleration sled testing to simulate contingency landings..Moonikin Campos was named after NASA engineer Arturo Campos, who was instrumental in returning the Apollo 13 crew safely to Earth..NASA teams worked alongside U.S. Air Force experts to better understand how the OCSS suit and Orion seat performed in extreme acceleration movements astronauts could experience during launch and in space. These findings will help improve suit, helmet, and seat design for future Artemis missions..â??With this test, Commander Moonikin Campos has continued his service to the crew, to ensure their safe return home, very much fitting with the legacy of his namesake,â? said Dustin Gohmert, OCSS project manager at NASAâ??s Johnson Space Center in Houston..The sled system at Wright-Patterson is hundreds of feet long and made of steel and concrete. An Orion spacecraft seat was mounted to the sled device and launched Moonikin Campos with accelerations up to 19g, 19 times a normal gravity force. A series of lights enabled engineers to clearly (Cr
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20230808_zia_c218_018 August 8, 2023, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States: NASAâ??s Commander Moonikin Campos, a manikin that flew on the Artemis I flight test beyond the Moon wearing the OCSS (Orion Crew Survival System) spacesuit has been sledding while going through a unique series of testing as a crash test dummy. .The tests are informing engineersâ?? understanding of what the experience of flying inside the agencyâ??s Orion spacecraft will be like on crewed missions to the Moon beginning with Artemis II..The OCSS suit will be worn by Artemis astronauts during the most dynamic phases of spaceflight: launch and re-entry through Earthâ??s atmosphere and landing. On Artemis I, Moonikin Camposâ?? seat was also equipped with sensors to record acceleration and vibration throughout the mission..Now back on Earth, the manikin's latest stop was at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where engineers put him through acceleration sled testing to simulate contingency landings..Moonikin Campos was named after NASA engineer Arturo Campos, who was instrumental in returning the Apollo 13 crew safely to Earth..NASA teams worked alongside U.S. Air Force experts to better understand how the OCSS suit and Orion seat performed in extreme acceleration movements astronauts could experience during launch and in space. These findings will help improve suit, helmet, and seat design for future Artemis missions..â??With this test, Commander Moonikin Campos has continued his service to the crew, to ensure their safe return home, very much fitting with the legacy of his namesake,â? said Dustin Gohmert, OCSS project manager at NASAâ??s Johnson Space Center in Houston..The sled system at Wright-Patterson is hundreds of feet long and made of steel and concrete. An Orion spacecraft seat was mounted to the sled device and launched Moonikin Campos with accelerations up to 19g, 19 times a normal gravity force. A series of lights enabled engineers to clearly (Cr
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20230808_zia_c218_017 August 8, 2023, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States: NASAâ??s Commander Moonikin Campos, a manikin that flew on the Artemis I flight test beyond the Moon wearing the OCSS (Orion Crew Survival System) spacesuit has been sledding while going through a unique series of testing as a crash test dummy. .The tests are informing engineersâ?? understanding of what the experience of flying inside the agencyâ??s Orion spacecraft will be like on crewed missions to the Moon beginning with Artemis II..The OCSS suit will be worn by Artemis astronauts during the most dynamic phases of spaceflight: launch and re-entry through Earthâ??s atmosphere and landing. On Artemis I, Moonikin Camposâ?? seat was also equipped with sensors to record acceleration and vibration throughout the mission..Now back on Earth, the manikin's latest stop was at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where engineers put him through acceleration sled testing to simulate contingency landings..Moonikin Campos was named after NASA engineer Arturo Campos, who was instrumental in returning the Apollo 13 crew safely to Earth..NASA teams worked alongside U.S. Air Force experts to better understand how the OCSS suit and Orion seat performed in extreme acceleration movements astronauts could experience during launch and in space. These findings will help improve suit, helmet, and seat design for future Artemis missions..â??With this test, Commander Moonikin Campos has continued his service to the crew, to ensure their safe return home, very much fitting with the legacy of his namesake,â? said Dustin Gohmert, OCSS project manager at NASAâ??s Johnson Space Center in Houston..The sled system at Wright-Patterson is hundreds of feet long and made of steel and concrete. An Orion spacecraft seat was mounted to the sled device and launched Moonikin Campos with accelerations up to 19g, 19 times a normal gravity force. A series of lights enabled engineers to clearly (Cr
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20230808_zia_c218_019 August 8, 2023, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States: NASAâ??s Commander Moonikin Campos, a manikin that flew on the Artemis I flight test beyond the Moon wearing the OCSS (Orion Crew Survival System) spacesuit has been sledding while going through a unique series of testing as a crash test dummy. .The tests are informing engineersâ?? understanding of what the experience of flying inside the agencyâ??s Orion spacecraft will be like on crewed missions to the Moon beginning with Artemis II..The OCSS suit will be worn by Artemis astronauts during the most dynamic phases of spaceflight: launch and re-entry through Earthâ??s atmosphere and landing. On Artemis I, Moonikin Camposâ?? seat was also equipped with sensors to record acceleration and vibration throughout the mission..Now back on Earth, the manikin's latest stop was at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where engineers put him through acceleration sled testing to simulate contingency landings..Moonikin Campos was named after NASA engineer Arturo Campos, who was instrumental in returning the Apollo 13 crew safely to Earth..NASA teams worked alongside U.S. Air Force experts to better understand how the OCSS suit and Orion seat performed in extreme acceleration movements astronauts could experience during launch and in space. These findings will help improve suit, helmet, and seat design for future Artemis missions..â??With this test, Commander Moonikin Campos has continued his service to the crew, to ensure their safe return home, very much fitting with the legacy of his namesake,â? said Dustin Gohmert, OCSS project manager at NASAâ??s Johnson Space Center in Houston..The sled system at Wright-Patterson is hundreds of feet long and made of steel and concrete. An Orion spacecraft seat was mounted to the sled device and launched Moonikin Campos with accelerations up to 19g, 19 times a normal gravity force. A series of lights enabled engineers to clearly (Cr
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20230808_zia_c218_020 August 8, 2023, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States: NASAâ??s Commander Moonikin Campos, a manikin that flew on the Artemis I flight test beyond the Moon wearing the OCSS (Orion Crew Survival System) spacesuit has been sledding while going through a unique series of testing as a crash test dummy. .The tests are informing engineersâ?? understanding of what the experience of flying inside the agencyâ??s Orion spacecraft will be like on crewed missions to the Moon beginning with Artemis II..The OCSS suit will be worn by Artemis astronauts during the most dynamic phases of spaceflight: launch and re-entry through Earthâ??s atmosphere and landing. On Artemis I, Moonikin Camposâ?? seat was also equipped with sensors to record acceleration and vibration throughout the mission..Now back on Earth, the manikin's latest stop was at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where engineers put him through acceleration sled testing to simulate contingency landings..Moonikin Campos was named after NASA engineer Arturo Campos, who was instrumental in returning the Apollo 13 crew safely to Earth..NASA teams worked alongside U.S. Air Force experts to better understand how the OCSS suit and Orion seat performed in extreme acceleration movements astronauts could experience during launch and in space. These findings will help improve suit, helmet, and seat design for future Artemis missions..â??With this test, Commander Moonikin Campos has continued his service to the crew, to ensure their safe return home, very much fitting with the legacy of his namesake,â? said Dustin Gohmert, OCSS project manager at NASAâ??s Johnson Space Center in Houston..The sled system at Wright-Patterson is hundreds of feet long and made of steel and concrete. An Orion spacecraft seat was mounted to the sled device and launched Moonikin Campos with accelerations up to 19g, 19 times a normal gravity force. A series of lights enabled engineers to clearly (Cr
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20230417_shv_z03_194 April 17, 2023 - Ohio, USA - Air Force Research Laboratory personnel and NASA staff hoist Campos, a fire and rescue training manikin, into a seat at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, April 17, 2023. AFRL and NASA tested the most current iteration of an astronaut crew seat and flight suit that will be used on the Orion space capsule during the next mission to the moon under the Artemis Program. (Credit Image: © U.S. Navy/ZUMA Press Wire Service/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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990_16_X-Wright-Bros_4HR Fort Myers, Virginia: September, 1907 Orville Wright making a test flight at Fort Myers for the War Department.
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990_05_4-AF-Misc_4HR Dayton, Ohio: March 24, 1950 Student test pilot Lt. Richard Dennen gets a send off in an F-80 Shooting Star at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base from two of the Flight Test Division's top pilots. At left is Major Leonard Wiehrdt, former test school chief, and at the right is Capt. Charles E. Yeager, the first man to fly faster than the speed of sound.
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00033398 transport / transportation, aviation, aeroplanes, 1st flight of Orville Wright Flyer I, Kitty Hawk, 17.12.1903,
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akg1545424 Militär / Länder / USA / Zweiter Weltkrieg / Luftwaffe.-Tests zu der Gefahr von Ohnmachten bei Kampfpiloten im Einsatz im Aero-Medical Laboratory auf dem Wright Field Material Command: Cpl. Wallace Shuffer im Flugsimulator ( angespannte Piloten sollen dabei weniger oft ein Blackout haben, als entspannte Kampfflieger).-Foto, 1944.
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akg380338 Wright, Wilbur US-American aviation pioneer. (worked with his brother Orville Wright); 1867-1912. Dan Tate and Wilbur Wright conducting an unmanned test flight with a biplane glider, flying it as a kite. Photo, 19th September 1902 (Orville Wright).
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akg333604 Wright, Orville American engineer; 1871-1948. First attempted flight by the brothers Orville and Wilbur Wright in a powered aircraft (lasted 12 seconds) on December 17, 1903 at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina (USA): Orville Wright in the biplane, his brother Wilbur observing. Photo.
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akg333587 Wright, Orville American aircraft technician; 1871-1948. The Wright brothers performing a test flight at Fort Myer, Virginia (USA), September 1908: the aircraft on the grounds. Photo.
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akg352312 Wright, Orville American aircraft engineer, 1871-1948. Orville Wright and Dan Tate during a flight attempt with a biplane test glider flown by Wilbur Wright. Photo, 18 October 1902. Digital coloration.
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akg233000 Wright, Orville American aircraft engineer. 1871-1948. Orville Wright and Dan Tate at a flight test of a biplane glider flown by Wilbur Wright. Photo, 18th Octoboer 1902.
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akg863068 Wright, Orville American aircraft engineer; 1871-1948.-Orville Wright is testing his new glider, near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina (USA), 1911. His longest flight so far lasting 9 minutes and 45 seconds on 24th October 1911. Photo (Wilbur Wright); coloured digitally.-.
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alb3880225 Vintage aviation photo featuring the first flight of the Wright Flyer on December 17, 1903 in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Orville Wright is piloting as brother Wilbur runs along beside.
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akg380368 Wright, Orville American aircraft engineer, 1871-1948. Orville Wright on test flight in his new glider at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina (USA). Photo, October 1911 (Wilbur Wright).
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akg380385 Wright, brothers Orville (1871-1948). and Wilbur (1867-1912). American aircraft engineers. Test flight with the new biplane glider at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina USA. Photo, 1911 (Wilbur & Orville Wright).
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akg380383 Wright, Orville American aircraft engineer, 1871-1948. Orville Wright and assistants prepare the new biplane glider for a test flight watched by a group of reporters on the right, Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, USA. Photo (Wilbur Wright), 1911.
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alb4074702 The first martyr of the age of age of flight'. Eugene Lefebvre at the time of his marvellous flights at Rheims'. He is shown standing to the left and flying in his Wright biplane'. Eugène Lefebvre (1878- 7 September 1909) was a French aviation pioneer. He was the first person to die while piloting a powered airplane and the second person to be killed in a powered airplane crash. Lefebvre was killed in a crash at Juvisy, when the plane he was testing dropped to the ground from a height of twenty feet. Sphere : an illustrated newspaper for the home. London, 1909. Source: Sphere, 18 September 1909, page 257.
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908_05_lehd0403 American pilots and inventors Orville Wright (1871-1948) and Wilbur Wright (1867-1912) testing a new airplane, in Kitty-Hawk, South Carolina, USA. Illustration from French newspaper Le Petit Parisien. January 24, 1904.
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HISL014_EC269 Wilbur Wright pilots a glider during Wright Brothers' flight experiments at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Ca. 1902.
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00587599 "transport / transportation, aviation, brothers Wright, first flight of Wilbur and Orville Weight, spectators waving from automobile, hang-glider of the Austrian engineer Wilhelm Kress, series of pictures ""The progress of aviation"", Liebig collection card, lithograph, circa 1905,"
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0091265 ARMY HELICOPTER, 1946. /nU.S. Army XR-9B Helicopter test flight at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio, 1946.
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0091552 BLACKHAWK TAKEOFF, 1948. /nA Curtiss-Wright XP-87 Blackhawk prototype fighter aircraft (later designated XF-87), during its first test flight at the Muroc, California Air Force base, 1948.
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0117483 WRIGHT BROTHERS GLIDER. /nOrville and Wilbur Wright, testing their glider at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, 1911.
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0067586 WRIGHT BROTHERS GLIDER. Dan Tate (foreground) and Wilbur Wright testing one of the Wright Brothers' gliders at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, 1902. Oil over a photograph.
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0016332 WRIGHT BROTHERS GLIDER. Dan Tate (foreground) and Wilbur Wright testing one of the Wright Brothers' gliders at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, 1902.
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Total de Resultados: 31

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