Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Shuttle Imagery Team






Last week I was sent to Houston for Imagery Support. When the shuttle is launched and in orbit, there is a camera that takes high resolution pictures to determine whether there are any damages to tiles, damaged thermal blankets, or loose gap fillers, as in the last flight. The team that I am a part of looks at these images and analyzes any damage indications to make sure our astronauts are safe to come back home. Thought everyone might enjoy these.

7 comments:

JMB said...

WOW!!! Those are some cool pix!!

God Bless

Unknown said...

Amazing pics...

Anonymous said...

Great pictures. I have gone to the spaceflight galleries for years to find pictures like those.

Also, Good Luck! It's an adrimable goal that I hope you accomplish.

Kitlat said...

Cool pics.

Shola said...

Nice Pics.

Does NASA have a satellite dedicated to tracking the shuttle in order to take these photos?

Shola Ogunlokun
I want to fly a hang glider across the UK

MZPEACH said...

When I first started blogging, you were the only site I would visit. I was a lurker than, my job changed my cpu and I lost your site. It just so happened, that we were throwing out cpu's today, they plugged my old one in and I found your site! Yipee. Glad to see all is well. Please don't let this comment spook you..rofl. I am really excited to have found your site again. I think it is wonderful that you accomplishing this goal.

Damaris Sarria Toepel said...

http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/ap_sts114_update_050727.html

This is a good article about the team I am on. But to answer your question, there is a camera attached to the shuttle's robotic arm.