sure people like to meme on That's Amore here on the internet but good luck stopping yourself from singing along when the moon hits YOUR eye like a big pizza pie (thats amore~)
Award-winning NASA mathematician and computer programmer Melba Mouton is being honored with the naming of a mountain at the Moon’s South Pole. Mouton joined NASA in 1959, just a year after the space agency was established. She was the leader of a team that coded computer programs to calculate spacecraft trajectories and locations. Her contributions were instrumental to landing the first humans on the Moon.
She also led the group of "human computers," who tracked the Echo satellites. Roy and her team's computations helped produce the orbital element timetables by which millions could view the satellite from Earth as it passed overhead.
The towering lunar landmark now known as “Mons Mouton” stands at a height greater than 19,000 feet. The mountain was created over billions of years by lunar impacts. Huge craters lie around its base—some with cliff-like edges that descend into areas of permanent darkness. Mons Mouton is the future landing site of VIPER, our first robotic Moon rover. The rover will explore the Moon’s surface to help gain a better understanding of the origin of lunar water. Here are things to know:
The VIPER mission is managed by our Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley. The approximately 1,000-pound rover will be delivered to the Moon by a commercial vendor as part of our Commercial Lunar Payload Services initiative, delivering science and technology payloads to and near the Moon.
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1st Photo Credit: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/308778118171072647/
2nd Photo Credit: http://www.expressnews.com/news/environment/article/SA-Botanical-Garden-is-growing-6271706.php
3rd Photo Credit: http://www.wikiwand.com/en/San_Antonio_Botanical_Garden
All three pictures show the scale of the Lucile Halsell Conservatory, the last two showing the scale and the interior. It is important to see how grand the conservatory truly is and how small the people are in comparison to the massive structures. Even next to the plants, the visitors look negligible proving that the buildings needed to be grand not only for a design aspect but because physically the function required it so the plants could grow and expand as needed.
Rocket Building in Saitama, Japan, built in the 1980s to house an astronomy museum, now mostly apartments.
(Sabukaru)
New Photos of “Uranus” by NASA (2023)
Peering beneath clouds of the ice giant - Uranus - scientists have seen strong evidence of a large polar cyclone at the planet's north pole. Astronomers, using data from ground-based telescopes, looked deeper into Uranus' atmosphere than ever before, observing that air at the north pole seems drier and warmer, an indication of a strong cyclone.
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NASA art by Don Davis, 1975.
(National Archives)
Don Davis, 1975.
(MoMA)
VR at NASA's Ames Research Center, 1989.