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Animation Identification Numbers 10300 through 10399



Movie ID Title
Close in as a Neutron Star emits a Gamma Ray Burst.   10300   Neutron Stars - A Closer Perspective:
Ace Spacecraft   10301   ACE - shockwave
Chipsat passes along the equator   10302   Chipsat Spacecraft
Lunar Eclipse   10303   Lunar Eclipse
EO-1 Overhead View   10304   EO-1 Spacecraft
Gro burns up   10305   Gamma Ray Observatory - Atmospheric Burnup
RHESSI over Earth   10306   RHESSI Spacecraft
Polar Spacecraft in orbit   10307   POLAR Spacecraft in orbit
WMAP heading away from Earth   10308   WMAP Spacecraft
NGTDRS in orbit   10309   Next Generation TDRS Spacecraft
QUIKToms in orbit   10310   QUIKToms Spacecraft
  10311   Spartan 201
A step by step walkthrough of the Boomerang mission from launch to return of the sample capsule   10312   LEX / Boomerang Mission
Print1   10313   GLAST - Print Still Images - Wallpaper
Lisa - 3 satellites in orbit   10314   Lisa - Print Still Image - Wallpaper
  10315   Cloudsat - Prints Still Images - Wallpaper
Print 1   10316   Calipso - Print Still Images - Wallpaper
Print 1   10317   Aura - Print Still Images - Wallpaper
<b> 1. Hubble Space Telescope Service Mission 4 Animation: </b> A collection of several animations showing the Hubble Space Telescope orbiting Earth and in space shuttle Atlantis cargo bay. All animations depict the Hubble Space Telescope in its current (July 2008) configuration.   10318   HST SM4 Extended Resource Reel v2.0
print1   10319   Swift - Print Still Images - Wallpaper
print1   10320   AIM - Print Still Images - Wallpaper
<b>1. Hubble Space Telescope Service Mission 4 Animation:</b> A collection of several animations showing the Hubble Space Telescope orbiting Earth and in space shuttle Atlantis cargo bay. All animations depict the Hubble Space Telescope in its current (July 2008) configuration.   10321   HST SM4 Resource Reel v2.0
Selected soundbites with Steve Ritz, GLAST Project Scientist (NASA/GSFC)   10322   GLAST Soundbites
NASA's Swift and GLAST satellites will work together to better understand the high energy universe. <p>For complete transcript, click <a href='GLASTcast_Episode3.htm'>here</a>.   10323   GLASTCast Episode 3 - Swift and GLAST
The hopes and anticipations of the GLAST team as they prepare for launch. <p>For complete transcript, click <a href='GLASTcast_Episode4_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10324   GLASTcast Episode 4: Launching a Spacecraft
Meet the major U.S. players behind the GLAST mission. <p> <p>For complete transcript, click <a href='GLASTcast_Episode5.htm'>here</a>.   10325   GLASTcast Episode 5: Meet the U.S. Team
<b><font size='-1'>A 30 Foot Cable for Laser Ranging</font></b><br/><br/>This fiber optic cable attaches to the back of the Laser Ranging Telescope at the end of the High Gain Antenna boom. It actually has three segments that connect to each other. The first two segments are used to transfer the lights from the back of the telescope to the bottom of the boom. The third segment is used to transfer the light from the bottom of the boom to the LOLA instrument. This cable was carefully handmade at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD.<br/>   10326   Assembly and Testing of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO)
This animation shows an astronauts gloved hand reaching out and touching the aft shroud area of the Hubble Space Telescope as if to say, “Hello, old friend.”   10327   Astronaut Touches Hubble Animation
<b>Fine Guidance Sensor Installation EVA </b> completed and edited animation sequence.   10328   Fine Guidance Sensor Installation EVA Animation
<b>HST SM4 Rendezvous and Capture </b> completed and edited animation sequence.   10329   HST SM4 Rendezvous and Capture Sequence
<b>HST SM4 New Outer Blanket Layer (NOBL) Installation EVA </b> completed and edited animation sequence.   10330   New Outer Blanket Layer (NOBL) Installation EVA Animation
This short web video features dynamic animations, science data visualizations, and excerpts with a NASA oceanographer to explore the fascinating phenomenon of ocean dead zones.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='In_the_Zone_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10331   In The Zone
Solar particle animation   10332   Solar Neutral Particles
Much is still to be learned about how aerosols affect climate. This video gives a general overview of cloud-aerosol interactions and how the upcoming Glory mission will enable better understanding in the future. <p>For complete transcript, click <a href='TheCloudMakers_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10333   The Cloud Makers
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter or LRO will give scientists more information about the structure of the Moon’s interior; the types of rock found there, events that shaped it, and the conditions that exist at the surface. LRO will spend one year in a polar orbit collecting this information. LRO's instrument suite will provide the highest resolution and the most comprehensive data set and the most detailed maps ever returned from the moon. It will carry an additional payload called LCROSS. The identification of water is very important to the future of human activities on the Moon. LCROSS will excavate the permanently dark floor of one of the Moon’s polar craters with two heavy impactors to test the theory that ancient ice lies buried there. The impact will eject material from the crater’s surface to create a plume that specialized instruments will be able to analyze for the presence of water (ice and vapor), hydrocarbons and hydrated material. <br/>   10334   Launch, Deploy, and Misson Animation
LRO will be launched via an Atlas V 401 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. It will take approximately four days for the satellite to travel to and then enter the moon's orbit. This video is from the launch of the MOR Mission. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter or LRO will give scientists more information about the structure of the Moon’s interior; the types of rock found there, events that shaped it, and the conditions that exist at the surface.   10335   The Atlas V Rocket Is Readied
<br/><br/>The Autonomous Star Trackers provide attitude data and motion rate of the satellite. They are based on a radiation hardened design and proprietary algorithms that ensure accurate and robust 3-axes attitude determination. These same instruments most recently flew onboard NASA's Messenger and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter missions. For complete transcript, click <a href='script_657_00.html'>here</a>.   10336   StarTrackers Light the Way
  10338   Looking Back at 2003s Spooky Halloween Solar Storms
Short video about the connection between NASA research and Icelandic puffins.   10339   The Puffin-Satellite Connection
Animation of the A-train including the Glory satellite.   10340   A-Train with Glory
Introduction: This gives a brief overview of the concepts behind the Engineering Design Process and outlines the goals of the series.   10341   BEST: Engineering Design Process Professional Development Series
Ionosphere changes animation   10342   Ionosphere and CINDI
In October 2008, Goddard hosted The Discovery Channel's 'Young Scientist Challenge.' The challenge brought ten middle school student finalists from across the country to vie for the title of 'America's Top Young Scientist' and a chance to win a U.S. Savings Bond. Five teacher finalists contended for recognition as 'America's Top Science Teacher.' NASA scientists and educators helped design the activities, which both tested the communication skills of the students and celebrated 50 years of NASA space science.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='dysc_transcript1.htm'>here</a>.   10343   Up to the Challenge
GLASTcast Episode 6: Mission Update<p><p><p>End of the year 2008 mission update on the GLAST/Fermi spacecraft.<p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='GLASTcast_6_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10345   GLASTcast in HD for Apple TV and iTunes
Hubble Space Telescope Servicing Mission 4 is the last time humans will visit Hubble. NASA’s scientists, engineers and astronauts are working together to make Hubble better than it has been before. See what NASA has planned for this last mission to Hubble; from new science instruments, to two challenging and never-done-before instrument repairs, and numerous upgrades.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='script_719_01.html'>here</a>.   10346   The Last Mission to Hubble
Orthographic Map<p><p>Astronomers wrapped the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope's first all-sky map over a sphere to produce this view of the gamma-ray universe. The globe in this animation rotates showing the galactic plane and the north galactic pole, then tilts up to show the south galactic pole region.   10347   GLAST First Light All Sky Map
A web feature about NASA’s plan to repair the Advanced Camera for Surveys during Hubble Servicing Mission 4.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='script_739_00.html'>here</a>.   10348   ACS Repair: The Challenge to Fix Hubble’s Best Survey Camera
This short video feature describes how LRO's instruments are used collectively to scout for safe landing sites. The crater depicted in this animation is ficticious and only intended for illustrative purposes.<p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='LRO_Safe_Landings_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10349   LRO Scouts for Safe Landing Sites
<b>Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph </b>(STIS), the most versatile spectrograph ever to fly on Hubble, ceased operations in August 2004 due to the failure of its power supply. In order to restore STIS to operational status, astronauts will perform a never-before-attempted on-orbit replacement of an electronics board inside STIS’s main electronics box. On Earth this operation is relatively simple, but in space many challenges confront the astronauts as they work to replace the failed board including working to remove 111 tiny, non-captive screws with astronaut gloves. <p> <b>The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph </b> (COS) that will be added during Servicing Mission 4, and STIS are highly complementary and are very complimentary to each other providing scientists with a full set of spectroscopic tools for astrophysical research. The STIS instrument’s accomplishments include determining the atmospheric composition of an exoplanet as well as spectra and images at ultraviolet and visible wavelengths of the Universe from our solar system out to cosmological distances. </p><p><p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='script_725_01.html'>here</a>.   10350   STIS Repair: The Quest for Renewed Exploration
Launch and Deployment animation.   10351   Launch and Deployment of IBEX
Arctic sea ice declined this summer to its second smallest extent in the satellite era, suggesting that the record set in 2007 may not have been an anomaly. If recent trends in the melt rate continue, we could see a virtually ice-free Arctic each summer much sooner than previously thought.<p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='SeaIce2008_transcript.htm'>here</a>.<p>   10353   Sea Ice 2008
CNOFS space craft beauty pass   10354   CNOFS beauty pass
Reconnection animation   10355   THEMIS discovers biggest breach of Earth's solar storm shield
NASA's THEMIS mission has overturned a longstanding belief about the interaction between solar particles and Earth's protective magnetic field. This new discovery could help scientists predict when the solar storms that can disrupt power grids, satellites and even GPS signals, could be especially severe.<p>For more information: www.nasa.gov/themis<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='THEMIS_script_12-11.htm'>here</a>.   10356   THEMIS Discovers Biggest Breach of Earth's Magnetosphere
End of the year 2008 mission update on the GLAST/Fermi spacecraft.<p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='GLASTcast_6_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10357   GLASTcast Episode 6: 2008 Mission Update
Conceptual animation depicting how geochemical processes during the course of Mars' history may have produced the methane plumes now seen in Mars' atmosphere. Here, through a process called serpentinization, methane is generated as part of a reaction involving the conversion of liquid water (seen seeping into the planet's crust), iron oxide, and carbon dioxide energized by the planet's internal heat into serpentine minerals.   10358   Geochemical Creation of Methane
Conceptual animation depicting how biological organisms (shown as oval-shaped translucent structures) living beneath the surface of Mars may have produced methane (shown as blue spheres).   10359   Biological Creation of Methane
Conceptual animation demonstrating the process of spectroscopy. The first animation demonstrates the general concept of visible-light spectroscopy by which white light is separated into its component wavelengths (colors) using a prism. The second animation demonstrates how this idea is applied to the discovery of methane in Mars' atmosphere. Because it absorbs specific wavelengths of electromagnetic energy, methane has a 'fingerprint' that can be seen as missing lines on the resulting spectograph.   10360   Mars Methane Spectroscopy
The pulsar's radio beams (green) never intersect Earth, but its pulsed gamma rays (magenta) do.   10361   Pulsars Emit Gamma-rays from Equator
In this animation, energy produced by radioactive minerals remove hydrogen from water molecules, which are then consumed by the microbes along with carbon dioxide. The microbes then emit methane as a byproduct.   10362   Radiolytic Production of Methane by Microbial Life
Mike Mumma and his team of researchers at Goddard Space Flight Center have made the first definitive observations of methane in the atmosphere of Mars. The evidence of methane plumes only during certain seasons and the chemical processes that could lead to its possible sources both raise intriguing questions for future study.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='Transcript_of_methane_short.htm'>here</a>.   10363   The Mystery of Martian Methane
SLIC: The Unsung Hero of Servicing Mission 4 is a web feature about NASA’s first all-composite carrier to fly on the shuttle. The Super Lightweight Interchangeable Carrier (SLIC) will carry the new Wide Field Camera 3 and replacement batteries for the Hubble Space Telescope during Servicing Mission 4.   10365   SLIC: The Unsung Hero of Servicing Mission 4
On September 13, 2008, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center opened its gates to the public for Launchfest, a free open house celebrating a large number of upcoming launches.<p><p>(no transcript, audio is music-only)   10367   Launchfest: On the Goddard Mall
As the star explodes, the narrow beam (white) of gamma rays is emitted first, followed by the wider beam (purple).   10369   Naked-Eye Gamma-ray Burst Model for GRB 080319B
Are We Waking Sleeping Giants?<p>Dr. Waleed Abdalait's lecture on Climate Change and Polar Ice.<p><p><p><p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='script_799_01.html'>here</a>.   10371   Climate Change and Polar Ice
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