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AirSpace

National Air and Space Museum

We see the connections to aviation and space in literally everything. From our favorite movies and the songs in our playlists to the latest news of space exploration and your commercial flight home for the holidays – aerospace is literally everywhere you look. Twice a month our hosts riff on some of the coolest stories of aviation and space history, news, and culture. We promise, whether you’re an AVGeek, wannabe Space Camper, or none of the above, you’ll find not only a connection to your life but you’ll learn something interesting in the process.

We see the connections to aviation and space in literally everything. From our favorite movies and the songs in our playlists to the latest news of space exploration and your commercial flight home for the holidays – aerospace is literally everywhere you look. Twice a month our hosts riff on some of the coolest stories of aviation and space history, news, and culture. We promise, whether you’re an AVGeek, wannabe Space Camper, or none of the above, you’ll find not only a connection to your life but you’ll learn something interesting in the process.

60hr 17min
Thumbnail for "These Are the Droids We're Working With".
In a lot of political and financial circles space exploration is often talked about in terms of human space exploration VERSUS robotic space travel. But most scientists and engineers who work on space missions think this question is better answered with a yes, and.
Thumbnail for "Meet Your AirSpacers".
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Bonus! The Air Up There: Airplane Facts with Max".
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Revisited: Journey to the Past".
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Bonus! Voting From a Station Far Far Away".
Thumbnail for "Defying Gravity".
Thumbnail for "Flak-Bait, Ooh Ha Ha!".
Thumbnail for "Movie Mini: Contact".
Thumbnail for "Birds of a Feather".
It's a bird? It's a plane? Its a guy pretending to be a bird??
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Thumbnail for "Lasso the Moon".
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Bonus! My Mom the Rocket Scientist".
Thumbnail for "Star Search".
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Thumbnail for "Welcome to Roswell".
Thumbnail for "Let's Talk About Sex".
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Thumbnail for "The Suicide Squad".
In the 1930s, rocketry was basically a joke among the scientific establishment in America. But that didn't stop a rag tag group out of Pasadena from trying to build rockets.
Thumbnail for "Bonus! This is Love: Tau = 10.8".
When twin rovers named Spirit and Opportunity landed on Mars twenty years ago, they were only supposed to last 90 Martian days.
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While we get Season Nine ready for you, we turned to our friends at Sidedoor to bring you a story of running and running and running and running…in Space!
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Revisited - With a Little Help From My Friends".
On a spring evening in 1933, Amelia Earhart took first lady Eleanor Roosevelt on a joyride.
Thumbnail for "When the Sun Went Out".
As we look forward to the total solar eclipse, we're looking back at an older eclipse that marked the start of democracy in what would be the USA.
Thumbnail for "Leap Day Bonus: Accounting for the Ish".
Did you know that it takes the Earth 365-ish days to orbit the sun?
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Afrofuturism is a cultural movement that explores the possibilities of Black futures through art, literature, music, film and pop culture. And a lot of Afrofuturism has a lot of space in it.
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Hollywood is in love with airports and airplanes and we are too
Thumbnail for "Video Killed the Radio Star".
From when it started in 1981, MTV used an iconic neon scribbled astronaut as it's channel ID for years
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Hurricanes are a fact of life in the Caribbean but in 2017, the season was so bad that it changed everything for the people of Puerto Rico.
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In January 1942 a B-314 flying boat operated by Pan American World Airways landed in New York after making arguably the first around the world flight by a commercial airliner.
Thumbnail for "Don't Rain on my Parade".
It's a very special day, parade day of course! The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade has been a holiday staple for almost 100 years, and the balloons have been a part of it for nearly as long.
Thumbnail for "You're on Your Own, Kid".
Space is dangerous. And as long as we've been sending people into space, we've also been thinking about what we can do to make sure they're prepared for it, and make sure they will come home again.
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When the Boeing 747 first came out it revolutionized the already revolutionary Jet Age, we're looking back on the more than 50 year history of the original Jumbo Jet.
Thumbnail for "Vast and Beckoning Seas".
Europa Clipper is soon to be on its was to the outer solar system to study one of Jupiter's most interesting moons.
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AirSpace is looking up! We're exploring how we hang really big, priceless artifacts from the ceiling in the museum.
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Revisited - It's a Barbie World and We're All Living in It".
When Barbie first became an astronaut in 1965, she was more than a decade ahead of NASA sending a woman to space. Since then, there have been several versions of astronaut Barbie.
Thumbnail for "AeroEspacial: Making Space Bustelo".
In the past several years an explosion of Star Wars movies, shows, and books have brought more diversity into the universe than ever before.
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En los últimos años, una explosión de películas, series y libros de la Guerra de las galaxias ha aportado más diversidad que nunca al universo.
Thumbnail for "AeroEspacial: El Dorado de Posibilidades".
Los artistas con frecuencia utilizan sus medios para contar historias, enviar mensajes o imaginar futuros distintos de nuestro presente.
Thumbnail for "AeroEspacial: El Dorado of Possibilities".
Artists frequently use their mediums to tell stories, send messages, or imagine futures unlike our present.
Thumbnail for "AeroEspacial: From Puerto Rico with Love".
In 2020, a devastating cable break led to the end of one of the most iconic radio telescopes in the world.
Thumbnail for "AeroEspacial: Desde Puerto Rico con Amor".
En 2020, una devastadora rotura de cable significó el final de uno de los radiotelescopios más icónicos del mundo.
Thumbnail for "AeroEspacial: The Second Star to the Right ".
In the early 1960s, more than 14,000 unaccompanied children left Cuba and their families behind, fleeing the Castro regime.
Thumbnail for "AeroEspacial: La Segunda Estrella a la Derecha".
Se necesita un poco de fe, confianza y una exención de visa. A principio de los sesenta, más de 14,000 niños sin acompañante dejaron Cuba y a sus familias, huyendo del régimen castrista.
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Coming soon to this podcast feed AeroEspacial, a second limited series from the creators of AirSpace! ¡Próximamente en el podcast AeroEspacial, una segunda serie limitada de los creadores de AirSpace!
Thumbnail for "Revisited - Sisters of the Moon".
It’s been nearly 50 years (!) since humans last walked on the Moon.  But NASA’s upcoming Artemis missions will soon return astronauts to the lunar surface.
Thumbnail for "Bonus! Wronging the Wrights".
It took pride, deceit, and a giant catapult to set off the feud between the Wright brothers and the Smithsonian.
Thumbnail for "It's a Barbie World and We're All Living In It".
When Barbie first became an astronaut in 1965, she was more than a decade ahead of NASA sending a woman to space. Since then, there have been several versions of astronaut Barbie.
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From Dante to Matt Damon, Percival Lowell to Perseverance, humans have long wondered about, studied, and eventually explored our closest planetary neighbor, Mars.
Thumbnail for "One Small Stop in Ohio".
In 1969, nearly 600 million people tuned in to watch the Apollo 11 Moon landing. Four of these rapt viewers were a family of Indian immigrants in Delaware. Four months later that family was driving through Ohio and decided to stop and knock on Neil Armstrong’s parent's door.
Thumbnail for "By Land, By Sea, By Dirigible".
Imagine this: It’s 1936 and you’re taking a luxurious three day flight from Germany to the United States in the Hindenburg. But instead of landing in New Jersey as expected, you dock to the top of the tallest building in the world: the Empire State Building.
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A duck in a hot air balloon. A cat in an airship. A lion cub in an airplane. Stories of animals in flight.
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Today thanks to GPS ecologist can track thousands of animals all the time with tracking devices smaller than a quarter. But in 1970 there was just a weather satellite, a 23 pound collar, and an elk named Monique.
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The Juno spacecraft currently orbiting Jupiter almost didn’t have a camera, and boy would that have been a shame.
Thumbnail for "It Takes More Than One".
In the fifties and sixties to get hired as a stewardess put you in a club that was akin to being a movie star.
Thumbnail for "Pigeons Are Pilots Too".
The pigeon – ubiquitous bird, oft city-dweller, and… war hero?
Thumbnail for "A Picture's Worth 1000 Words ".
We’ve all seen the breathtaking Hubble and JWST images of our universe, but have you ever wondered how these pictures are made?
Thumbnail for "Across the Universe".
At the turn of the 20th century, astronomy got a serious glow-up.
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We’re kicking off this season with an episode that really gets to the CORE of what AirSpace is all about.
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Season 7 of AirSpace coming soon!
Thumbnail for "Bonus! Live Long and Protest".
A special bonus from our friends at PORTRAITS!
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How America's first large space telescope went from a "billion-dollar blunder" to one of history's most important scientific instruments.
Thumbnail for "If the World Was Ending".
It’s Halloween eve, 1938, and you're listening to the radio when you hear a breaking news bulletin that there's been a Martian attack!... On New Jersey?
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It’s rare for our hosts to unpack a space movie after all seeing it for the very first time.
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You can’t fly really fast without a big boom.
Thumbnail for "How Do You Sleep?".
Catching Zs in zero-G.
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In 1971 an Apollo 14 astronaut took about 500 tree seeds into orbit around the Moon.
Thumbnail for "Look at the Sky".
A popular form of aerial advertising and even the occasional marriage proposal, skywritten messages can have a BIG impact (and with letters approximately 1500 feet tall… we mean that quite literally). 
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When you hear the term “space archeology” you might envision a khaki-clad astronaut excavating the Moon.  But, space archeologists are actually Earth-bound researchers who use satellite and other aerial imagery to assist in archeological applications right here on our home planet.
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NASA’s upcoming Artemis missions will soon return astronauts to the lunar surface
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What about electric vehicles in the *sky*?
Thumbnail for "QueerSpace: Fight For Your Right ".
We talk a lot about pilots and astronauts who’ve made history, but today’s aerospace trailblazer was a humble NASA civil servant and petitioner named Clifford Norton. 
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Staring at the Sun for science.
Thumbnail for "Ice Ice Baby".
You might know them as the Ice Giants, but really they’re big mush-balls: Uranus and Neptune.
Thumbnail for "99 Luftballons".
What started with a magazine article about the Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta ended with a thrilling aerial escape from East Germany in 1979.
Thumbnail for "QueerSpace: Saxophones on the Moon".
Anyone who’s observed the Milky Way or has seen a beautiful Hubble image can understand how space and space imagery can be a source of creative inspiration.
Thumbnail for "QueerSpace: Becoming Light".
Historically, queer-identifying people in the U.S. military have been forced out or forced to hide who they are.
Thumbnail for "QueerSpace: We’re All Stories In The End ".
In science fiction, the possibilities are seemingly endless.
Thumbnail for "QueerSpace: Fly the Friendly Skies".
Welcome to QueerSpace — a limited series featuring stories and people at the intersection of aviation, space, and LGBTQ+ history and culture
Thumbnail for "Revisited - Supermassive Black Hole".
They’re incredibly dense, super cool, and mind-bendingly-mysterious -- BLACK HOLES!
Thumbnail for "Jetstream".
The early days of aviation were full of outlandish characters, and it can be a little exhausting
Thumbnail for "With a Little Help From My Friends".
On a spring evening in 1933, Amelia Earhart took first lady Eleanor Roosevelt on a joyride.
Thumbnail for "Fly Me To The Moon".
Traveling for the holidays? Would you rather take a trip to the Moon?
Thumbnail for "Little Bombs".
An actress, aviatrix, and altruist? Now, that’s a triple threat.
Thumbnail for "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised".
93% of televisions in the United States tuned in to see Neil Armstrong walk on the Moon. Can you believe 7% were watching something else?
Thumbnail for "Even Better Than the Real Thing".
Have you always wanted to experience what it’s like to be an astronaut but without the queasy upshot of actually shooting into space?
Thumbnail for "Don't Hold Your Breath".
Ever wonder what would happen to your body in space without a spacesuit?
Thumbnail for "Reflektor ".
Mirror, mirror under the football field, what secrets of the universe will you yield?
Thumbnail for "Leaving for Paris".
100 years ago Bessie Coleman became the first African American woman to earn her pilot's license.
Thumbnail for "Moonshine".
Raise a glass and cheers to a new season of AirSpace! And to help us get in the celebratory mood, today's episode is about a truly intoxicating period of American history – prohibition.
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Revisited - Troop Zero ".
We’re revisiting a favorite from May 2020 – the first installment of the AirSpace Movie Club.
Thumbnail for "BONUS – Say My Name Again".
What’s in a name?
Thumbnail for "It's the End of the World As We Know It".
We’d be lying if we told you we don’t occasionally daydream about the end of the world. But, like, scientifically speaking.
Thumbnail for "Radar Love".
Earth’s twin or Earth’s evil twin? It depends on who you ask.
Thumbnail for "Nine Voices".
A long time ago (2013), and not so far away (New Mexico), a group embarked on a quest: to translate Star Wars: A New Hope into Navajo.
Thumbnail for "Chicago Flyer".
In 1930s Chicago, the Challenger Air Pilots Association cultivated a community that has since helped thousands of Black pilots learn how to fly. And it all started with a broken down car.
Thumbnail for "Safety Dance ".
If you’ve flown commercial, you’re familiar with the preflight safety spiel.
Thumbnail for "Art Decade ".
Did you know the National Air and Space Museum has a huge art collection?
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Any child of the 80s or 90s knows about Space Camp. But, what’s its origin story? And how did it become such a part of the millennial zeitgeist?
Thumbnail for "Say My Name".
Have you ever wondered how the stuff in space gets named?
Thumbnail for "Supermassive Black Hole".
They’re incredibly dense, super cool, and mind-bendingly-mysterious -- BLACK HOLES!
Thumbnail for "Water Me".
Did you hear they found water on the Moon? Or was it Mars? No wait, Mercury? An asteroid?
Thumbnail for "Nicotine Stain".
Flight attendants were instrumental in the fight to get smoking OUT of the skies
Thumbnail for "VOYAGES TO MARS: Landing".
This week the Perseverance Rover will touch down on the surface of Mars, bringing an end to its seven-month journey and this mixtape.
Thumbnail for "Cool It Now".
Right now COVID-19 vaccines are traveling across the country and around the world – and air travel is a critical component of this supply chain.
Thumbnail for "Bonus! To Gaze".
An audio tour of the night sky
Thumbnail for "VOYAGES TO MARS: Searching".
The search for life is a pillar of Mars exploration. But our search isn’t only confined to the planets of our solar system.
Thumbnail for "Bonus! NOVA Now: How the future of satellites might affect life on Earth".
Satellites from NASA and private companies are making headlines. What’s their history and how might their future affect space and life here on Earth?
Thumbnail for "Never Surrender".
It’s safe to say that the AirSpace pod loves Galaxy Quest, but doesn’t everyone!? It has it all: sci-fi, action, and comedy, an underdog who saves the day, and feel good story with space aliens!
Thumbnail for "VOYAGES TO MARS: Dreaming".
Interplanetary road trips take a WHILE. So for this episode of Voyages to Mars, while we cruise onward towards the Red Planet, we’re listening to some poetry that pays tribute to long duration space travel.
Thumbnail for "Blinded by the Light".
Did you learn the constellations as a child? Odds are, if you lived in a city, you saw more stars in the classroom—or a planetarium if you were lucky—than by looking at the night sky.
Thumbnail for "Station to Station".
This month marks the 20th birthday of the International Space Station! That’s 240 straight months—which is exactly how long 2020 feels so far.
Thumbnail for "VOYAGES TO MARS: Sending Humans".
Ray Bradbury’s The Martian Chronicles, published a few years before the world’s first satellite was even launched (!), remains one of the most influential stories of human settlement on Mars ever published.
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On this episode of AirSpace we’re spotlighting the heroic service and enduring legacy of the Women Airforce Service Pilots, or WASP.
Thumbnail for "Open the Gate".
We’re all fans of something—movies, tv shows, video games, comic books, sports teams, you name it!—and that can help us connect with new people with shared interests and frames of reference.
Thumbnail for "VOYAGES TO MARS: Robots".
Humans aren't yet able to go to Mars ourselves, so we’re reliant on the help of rovers and landers to be our eyes and ears on the surface - our mechanical 'boots on the ground.' This episode is our ode to ROBOTS!
Thumbnail for "Danger Zone".
There have been great movies about military aviation for almost as long as there have been movies and airplanes
Thumbnail for "The Long Way Home".
82,000 American service members are listed as Missing in Action – 72,000 from World War II alone.
Thumbnail for "VOYAGES TO MARS: Crossing Lunar Orbit ".
Leaving Earth on your way to Mars, the first pit stop you might make is the Moon’s orbit.
Thumbnail for "Me and the Sky".
If you’re a Broadway fan (or have been ANYWHERE near a theater in the last couple years), you’ve likely heard about Come From Away—the Tony-award-winning smash hit musical with a story firmly rooted in generations of aviation history.
Thumbnail for "The Greatest Discovery".
If you had $500 MILLION dollars to spend going anywhere in the solar system (rocket not included), where would YOU go?
Thumbnail for "VOYAGES TO MARS: Launch".
To accompany NASA's Perseverance rover on its seven-month journey, we’re compiling a literary mixtape of Martian sci-fi set to music by DJ Kid Koala.
Thumbnail for "Mask, Gloves, Soap, Scrubs ".
We’ve talked about planetary protection on the pod before, but it’s never felt closer to home than now, so we’re digging a little deeper into what it takes to keep our planet safe from space germs and keep space safe from Earth germs.
Thumbnail for "The Rover".
At least someone's big summer trip isn't cancelled—NASA is sending another rover to Mars!
Thumbnail for "Back in the USSR".
Welcome to Season 3! Today we’re talking about secret space shuttles--seriously!
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Movie Club: Sully".
Today we’re talking about Sully, the movie based on the real-life emergency water landing of US Airways flight 1549 which ditched in the Hudson River in January 2009.
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Movie Club: Snowpiercer ".
In this addition of our at-home movie club, we explore the world of the sci-fi thriller Snowpiercer.
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Movie Club: Superman".
Emily, Matt and Nick talk about the Man of Steel in his appearance in this 1978 classic film.
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Movie Club: Troop Zero".
We're BACK!!! With a special movie mini series. Episode One - Troop Zero
Thumbnail for "Survivor".
Is that a Martian bacterium you just found, or is it an Earth bug accidentally along for the ride?
Thumbnail for "Out of the Frying Pan".
Emily, Matt, and Nick unpack story behind their new favorite space movie (yes, it’s even better than Armageddon!).
Thumbnail for "Every Rose Has Its Thorn".
Today on the show, we tackle the meaning of life. Well… not really. But definitely matters of consequence.
Thumbnail for "What’s He Building?".
Today we’re talking about a really cool project that brought together one former-Mythbuster, a couple of Smithsonian units, and makers across the country to reimagine an incredible piece of Apollo engineering.
Thumbnail for "Night Witches".
This isn’t a lame Halloween story, this is badass history.
Thumbnail for "Walking on the Moon Part 2".
In part two of Walking on the Moon, we’re talking about the important science still happening with Apollo Moon rocks here on Earth a half-century later.
Thumbnail for "Walking on the Moon Part 1".
50 years ago this July, humans set foot on the Moon for the first time.
Thumbnail for "Rock on the Moon".
What music would you take along on a quarter-million mile road trip?
Thumbnail for "Help!".
Some of the world’s best pilots are the ones you hope never to see.
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An asteroid the size of…. Massachusetts.
Thumbnail for "AirSpace Live at SXSW".
Failure is Always An Option
Thumbnail for "Hail to the Chief ".
On this episode of AirSpace we’re talking about the most exclusive form of public transportation – presidential flight.
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As you may have heard, astronauts Christina Koch and Anne McClain were scheduled to perform a spacewalk today.
Thumbnail for "Rover RESPECT".
Curiosity is getting a new friend named Rosalind Franklin.
Thumbnail for "Get Off of My Cloud".
Longtime listeners know that bailing out of an airplane is a last resort that pilots take very seriously. But what happens when you unwittingly eject straight into a thundercloud?
Thumbnail for "Season 2 is coming!".
The second season of AirSpace is coming in March!
Thumbnail for "When You Wish Upon a Star".
Dreamers may wish upon stars, but the AirSpace hosts wish upon meteors.
Thumbnail for "Spirit in the Sky".
Flying in space is precise, technical, and surprisingly personal.
Thumbnail for "Good Vibrations".
EXTRA! EXTRA! ROBOT LANDING ON MARS!
Thumbnail for "I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing".
2 Space Shuttles + 1 asteroid the size of Texas + a dash of 90s rock = the most terribly wonderful space movie of all time? Well, maybe for Emily, Matt, and Nick.
Thumbnail for "Rocket Man ".
Spoiler – they land on the Moon.
Thumbnail for "Smoke From a Distant Fire".
What used to be a fire season is now more like a fire year.
Thumbnail for "Today's Lesson".
Teacher in Space Christa McAuliffe’s lesson plans fly in space 32 years later
Thumbnail for "Under Pressure".
Deep sea and deep space are more alike than you may think
Thumbnail for "Around the World/Around the World".
How international is the International Space Station?
Thumbnail for "The Ninety-Nines".
Kicking butt and taking flight
Thumbnail for "Happy (Planet) Hunting".
There’s a little black spot on the Sun today
Thumbnail for "Spies in the Sky".
Emily, Matt, and Nick provide the intel on our eyes in the sky and the high-flying hi-tech that makes it possible.
Thumbnail for "Little Robots".
Did we just find life on Mars? No. But NASA did announce two exciting new discoveries on the Red Planet—just before a Martian dust storm engulfed the planet.
Thumbnail for "Space Junk".
When space exploration began, so did the garbage.
Thumbnail for "Gastro-naut".
You’ve heard about a gastropub, but what about an astropub? Nobody becomes an astronaut for the food, but space cuisine has come a long way since the 1960s. You can now find espresso and tortillas aboard the International Space Station, but there is sadly no astronaut ice cream. In this episode, we’ll find out what does – and does not – appeal to the modern gastro-naut.
Thumbnail for "2001: An AirSpace Odyssey".
Open the podcast doors, HAL.
Thumbnail for "Remembering Stephen Hawking".
Emily, Matt, and Nick reflect on Hawking's enduring impact on science and culture.
Thumbnail for "Bailing Out".
Getting out is just the beginning.
Thumbnail for "The Right Stuff Right Now".
So you want to be an astronaut...
Thumbnail for "Mars Time".
It’s 5 o’clock somewhere on Mars.
Thumbnail for "Countdown to Launch".
Coming Soon... Stories that defy gravity from the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum.

These Are the Droids We're Working With

Thumbnail for "These Are the Droids We're Working With".
December 14, 202334min 32sec

In a lot of political and financial circles space exploration is often talked about in terms of human space exploration VERSUS robotic space travel. But most scientists and engineers who work on space missions think this question is better answered with a yes, and. We're diving into the pros, cons and uses of both human and robotic space exploration today on AirSpace.

We’re joined by Dr Erica Jawin, Postdoctoral Research Geologist at NASM’s Center for Planetary Studies

Thanks to our guests for this episode:

  • Dr Brett Denevi, Geology Lead Artemis III, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab

  • Bobak Ferdowsi, Systems Engineer on Robotic Space Missions

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AirSpace is made possible by the generous support of Olay.

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These Are the Droids We're Working With
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