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Conceptually similar
Space Shuttle Enterprise atop 747
747 Transporting Space Shuttle
Space Shuttle Enterprise atop 747
Space Shuttle Enterprise Takeoff
Space Shuttle Columbia
Space Shuttle Enterprise Takeoff
Space Shuttle Enterprise Head-on
Space Shuttle Columbia Mounted on Shuttle Carrier
Space Shuttle Columbia
Space Shuttle Columbia
Space Shuttle Columbia
NASA Modified 747-100 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft
747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft Takeoff with Space Shuttle
Modified Boeing 747 with NASA Space Shuttle
Modified Boeing 747 with NASA Space Shuttle
747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft Takes Off with Shuttle
747 Space Shuttle Carrier and Space Shuttle Models in Wind Tunnel Tests at Microcraft
747 Space Shuttle Carrier and Space Shuttle Models in Wind Tunnel Tests at Microcraft
A Specially Modified 747-100 Transports the Space Shuttle
Shuttle Flight Deck
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Shuttle and 747 in Flight Overhead
NASA's Space Shuttle is an operational, reusable and human-rated spacecraft. Designed to take off like a rocket and maneuver in space like a spaceship, it can return to Earth and land on a runway like an airplane. The idea of a winged spacecraft that could make airplane-like landings goes back to the early 1960s. The North American X-15 program, the McDonnell ASSET re-entry vehicle and the Boeing X-20 Dyna-Soar project, explored the concept of a reusable spacecraft. But, it wasn't until after Project Apollo ended that NASA began development of a spacecraft that would serve as an Earth-to-orbit space truck. This program evolved into the Space Transportation System, or STS, known today as the Space Shuttle. In 1972, NASA selected North American Rockwell as the prime contractor to build the shuttle. North American not only had experience in building Apollo spacecraft, but it also built the X-15 rocket plane, the first winged aircraft to fly to space and land on a runway. Boeing and McDonnell Douglas were key program partners. The STS consists of a delta-winged orbiter, a huge detachable fuel tank and two detachable solid rocket boosters. The shuttle orbiter and the solid rocket boosters are reusable. The external fuel tank is expended during each launch. The shuttle orbiter is the only part that actually goes into space. The first orbiter, the Enterprise, was used for flight tests in the atmosphere. It was followed by Columbia, which made the first space flight in April 1981. The orbiters Challenger, Discovery, and Atlantis followed. A fifth operational shuttle, Endeavor, was added in 1991. Once in orbit, the shuttle travels at 17,500 miles per hour, and can reach altitudes up to 600 miles above the Earth.
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Unique identifier
BI22038
Boeing ID
583-418
Size
5998px × 4798px 82MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1980s
ascending
cargo handling
clouds
commercial
day
exteriors
flying
full body views
gray
gray skies
ground to air
monochromatic
muted colors
nobody
other livery
passenger helicopters
payload systems
photos
power
scanned from film negative
Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA)
Space Shuttle orbiters
spacecraft
viewed from below
vignetting
white
Restrictions
Manage crops
NAME
RATIO
Square
1 : 1
Portrait
2 : 3
Landscape
3 : 2