The Fuzz vol 65 (Kaori Kirara) Japanese porn moviefirst astronauts who put boots on the moon took a few space souvenirs — for scientific research, of course.
One of them will get to visit home for the first time in 53 years.
We're talking about a little rock, by the way, not an astronaut.
NASA's Artemis I mission, which could blast off from Cape Canaveral, Florida, as early as Nov. 16, won't have any human travelers, but its Orion spacecraft is taking an eclectic mishmash of mementos on the 1.3 million-mile journey. Among the trove will be an Apollo 11 moon rock. This well-traveled piece of rubble also happened to be along for the ride during the agency's final Space Shuttle flight in 2011.
The "official flight kit," which consists of about 120 pounds of weird stuff, is established in federal law. Its purpose is to allow NASA, commercial partners, and international organizations to use the mementos as either awards or museum exhibits. In order to get those items onboard, however, each organization has to first put their request in writing for NASA's approval.
SEE ALSO: NASA astronauts on Artemis could talk to a spaceship computerThere are a lot of flags, patches, and stickers in the mix, most intended for employees and contractors who worked on the project, but here are some of the less expected items that made the cut. (Spoiler: It's a heckuva lot of dolls.)
The maiden voyage of Artemis on NASA's colossal Space Launch System rocket won't have any crew to let mission control know when the spacecraft has reached the weightlessness of space. NASA plans to put a Snoopy doll in the cabin to use as a visual zero-gravity indicator.
Since the 1960s, Snoopy, the comic strip beagle drawn by Charles M. Schulz, has had a relationship with NASA. Schulz created many illustrations of the dog in space and on the moon. Along with the doll, Orion will carry one of Schulz's pen nibs, wrapped in a space-themed comic strip, and 245 silver snoopy pins.
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newslettertoday.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The European Space Agency has contributed a small statue of the Greek goddess Artemis, the space program's namesake. In Greek mythology, Artemis was the twin of Apollo and goddess of the hunt. A 3D-printed replica will fly on the spacecraft, to be displayed later in the Acropolis Museum in Greece.
The Israeli Space Agency, NASA, and Boeing have put bags of tree seeds in the kit. The seeds will be distributed to teachers and schools after the flight for educational opportunities.
Seeds were taken on the Apollo 14 mission to understand the effects of deep space on plants. But the can containing them broke (woops), with the seeds getting mixed together. Because their environment was contaminated, the experiment was no longer viable, according to NASA.
Still, the seeds were delivered to the U.S. Forest Service. About 450 saplings grew from them and have become known as "moon trees."
Though not part of the flight kit, NASA's three mannequins count toward some of the odd cargo packed on the spacecraft. Cmdr. Moonikin Campos, Helga, and Zohar will fill Orion's seats.
Campos, named after Apollo-era electrical engineer Arturo Campos, will sit in the pilot's seat, wearing the new Orion Crew Survival System flight suit. Two sensors will measure the acceleration and vibration the dummy experiences.
The sister pair, a collaboration of the German and Israeli space agencies, will be part of a radiation exposure experiment, collecting data from thousands of sensors. Zohar will wear a protective vest, while Helga won't.
Scientists chose to use female mannequins because space radiation may increase the risk of breast and ovarian cancer for female astronauts. As NASA prepares to send the first woman to the surface of the moon for the Artemis III mission, and hopefully many others after, this test should allow scientists to study the amount of radiation people experience during lunar trips.
You know how when you're assembling furniture at home, there are always a few extra pieces remaining? Kind of gives you a disconcerting feeling that the thing is just one wrong move from falling apart.
Fortunately, this bolt isn't an extra piece leftover from the Space Launch System or Orion capsule, Artemis' new vehicles, but another relic from the past. The bolt, along with a nut and washer, came from one of Apollo 11's F-1 engines.
Kate, Kyle, Julia, and Sebastian are headed to the moon. Now you know why they keep singing, "Everything is awesome."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
NASA and LEGO Education have collaborated on a free Artemis I "Build to Launch" lesson plan. The 10-week series focuses on STEM space careers and problem-solving "similar to those the Artemis I team members face," according to the space agency.
But let's face it: The product exposure probably doesn't hurt sales on those $160 LEGO Rocket Launch Center sets.
This story originally published on Aug. 28, 2022.
Kim Kardashian Landline Dreamscape by Sarah MillerThe Lawn Is Resting: A Visit to Balzac’s House by Bailey TrelaDear Mother by Colm TóibínThe Lawn Is Resting: A Visit to Balzac’s House by Bailey TrelaOn Friendship: Juliana Leite and Devon Geyelin Recommend by The Paris ReviewAugust 14–20: What the Review’s Staff Is Doing Next Week by The Paris ReviewA Summer Dispatch from the Review’s Poetry Editor by Srikanth ReddyThe Review’s Review: Don Carlo and the Abuse of Power by Krithika VaragurBeyond ChatGPT by Jonathan ThirkieldThe Green and the Gold by Helen LongstrethAugust 7–13: What the Review’s Staff is Doing Next Week by The Paris ReviewJets and Trash by Tao LinAmericans Abroad by Andrew MartinCooking with Elizabeth David by Valerie Stivers“The Dead Silence of Goods”: Annie Ernaux and the Superstore by Adrienne RaphelThe Cups Came in a Rush: An Interview with Margot Bergman by Na KimThe Paris Review Print Series: Shara Hughes by The Paris ReviewDear Mother by Colm TóibínAugust 7–13: What the Review’s Staff is Doing Next Week by The Paris Review@ErasTourUpdates: Taylor Swift in Philadelphia by Jake Nevins This Instagram account teaches you the LGBTQ history you never learned in school Sydney Opera House will light up with Indigenous Australian art every sunset Congrats to the Portland Trail Blazers, who just won sports Twitter For about 10 minutes, people thought Amazon was going to buy FedEx Troubled shoots that became classic movies, or why Han Solo fans shouldn't worry The new 'Metroid' game on 3DS feels super modern in the best way NASCAR just shared a recipe for deep Exclusive: This is Vivo's under Ancient 'skull cult' might've carved up bones to shame their enemies Watch out Google Earth, Apple Maps has a hidden VR A new ransomware is sweeping the globe, but there's a vaccine George Lucas' L.A. museum is an unexpectedly erotic 'Veep' reference Somebody beat Nintendo and made a mini SNES out of an old SNES cartridge Galaxy Note 7s are coming to South Korea, because nothing ever dies '1984' on Broadway is making audiences faint The latest '4:44' teaser is called 'Kill Jay Z' and it's a doozy Pepe the Frog cartoonist is trying to it back from the alt Morgan Freeman lookalike travels to Magaluf, has the best weekend ever Pregnant dog gets the perfect Anthropologie People stood in line outside 'world's best' ramen restaurant for 10 days
1.3201s , 10161.4453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Fuzz vol 65 (Kaori Kirara) Japanese porn movie】,Exquisite Information Network