Want to know where you can see some of the most famous, cutting-edge aerospace vehicles ever flown?
The booster carrying NASA's Hypersonic Boundary Layer Transition (HYBOLT) and Sub-Orbital Aerodynamic Re-entry Experiments (SOAREX) had to be destroyed shortly after liftoff Aug. 22.
In the Visitors' Center, author and historian Tom Crouch stood in front of a replica of the Wright Brothers original plane and told an assembly the story of the beginning of manned flight.
Retired NASA Dryden Flight Research Center test pilot Bill Dana was honored Saturday evening, Aug. 9, by the Lancaster Jethawks Class A baseball team during its annual Aerospace Appreciation Night.
Tony Ginn comes from a flying family. He carries on that tradition at work and at home.
For a pilot, going to EAA's AirVenture in Oshkosh, Wis., is like a kid walking into a candy store.
NASA and Administrator Mike Griffin join aviation enthusiasts and aerospace pioneers at EAA AirVenture 2008 in Oshkosh, Wis.
Like a long-necked, yellow carnivore, the crane lunges forward. Its jaws take another bite of metal, and then the crane pulls back so that the jaws can drop their load into a truck.
When flight crews have to bail out or eject from a crippled aircraft, they have to know how to survive once they hit the ground or water.
One hundred years ago, Charles Furnas became the first airplane passenger. Read more historical facts in This Month in Exploration.