
S94-38174 (30 June 1994) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms.

S90-45390 (August 1990) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, mission specialist.

Former NASA astronaut Susan Kilrain poses for a photograph with attendees prior to the screening of the NASA produced documentary “The Color of Space” at Howard University’s Cramton Auditorium in Washington, Saturday, June 18, 2022. Premiering on Juneteenth, the federal holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the United States, “The Color of Space” is an inspirational documentary that tells the stories of NASA’s Black astronauts determined to reach the stars. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)

Susan Bardenhagen, an educator from the Fairfax County Public Schools, speaks during a panel discussion on inspiration in education at the 2011 NASA Future Forum held at the Riggs Alumni Center on the campus of the University of Maryland, Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011, in College Park, Md. Photo Credit: (NASA/Paul E. Alers)

STS064-33-003 (9-20 Sept. 1994) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, STS-64 mission specialist, uses a laser instrument during operations with the Shuttle Pointed Autonomous Research Tool for Astronomy 201 (SPARTAN 201). Helms, who spent many mission hours at the controls of the Remote Manipulator System (RMS), joined five other NASA astronauts for almost 11 days in Earth orbit aboard the space shuttle Discovery. Photo credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration

S90-45852 (29-31 July 1990) --- Susan J. Helms, one of 23 astronaut candidates who began a year's training and evaluation in July, participates in one of may sessions at a survival training course at Vance Air Force Base. This portion of the course is designed to familiarize the trainee with the "feel" of emergency ejection from a jet aircraft.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Community leaders, business executives, educators, and state and local government leaders were updated on NASA Kennedy Space Center programs and accomplishments during Center Director Bob Cabana’s Center Director Update at the Debus Center at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida. At left, Susan Fernandez from the Office of Senator Marco Rubio talks with another attendee near the Education display. Attendees talked with Cabana and other senior Kennedy managers and visited displays featuring updates on Kennedy programs and projects, including International Space Station, Commercial Crew, Ground System Development and Operations, Launch Services, Center Planning and Development, Technology, KSC Swamp Works and NASA Education. The morning concluded with a tour of the new Space Shuttle Atlantis exhibit at the visitor complex. For more information, visit http://www.nasa.gov/kennedy. Photo credit: NASA/Daniel Casper

NASA astronaut Ron Garan gives a keynote address at the Susan G. Komen International Global Women's Cancer Summit, held on World Cancer Day, Monday, February 4, 2013 in Washington, D.C. Attendees include world leaders in health and women’s cancers, experts in technology and innovation; government leaders, private sector and industry leaders, members of the global health community, media and representatives from community-level organizations. Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)

NASA astronaut Ron Garan gives a keynote address at the Susan G. Komen International Global Women's Cancer Summit, held on World Cancer Day, Monday, February 4, 2013 in Washington, D.C. Attendees include world leaders in health and women’s cancers, experts in technology and innovation; government leaders, private sector and industry leaders, members of the global health community, media and representatives from community-level organizations. Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)

NASA astronaut Ron Garan gives a keynote address at the Susan G. Komen International Global Women's Cancer Summit, held on World Cancer Day, Monday, February 4, 2013 in Washington, D.C. Attendees include world leaders in health and women’s cancers, experts in technology and innovation; government leaders, private sector and industry leaders, members of the global health community, media and representatives from community-level organizations. Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)

NASA astronaut Ron Garan gives a keynote address at the Susan G. Komen International Global Women's Cancer Summit, held on World Cancer Day, Monday, February 4, 2013 in Washington, D.C. Attendees include world leaders in health and women’s cancers, experts in technology and innovation; government leaders, private sector and industry leaders, members of the global health community, media and representatives from community-level organizations. Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)

NASA astronaut Stephanie Wilson, left, and former NASA astronauts Leland Melvin and Susan Kilrain pose for a photograph prior to the screening of the NASA produced documentary “The Color of Space” at Howard University’s Cramton Auditorium in Washington, Saturday, June 18, 2022. Premiering on Juneteenth, the federal holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the United States, “The Color of Space” is an inspirational documentary that tells the stories of NASA’s Black astronauts determined to reach the stars. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)

STS064-05-028 (9-20 Sept. 1994) --- On the space shuttle Discovery's aft flight deck, astronaut Susan J. Helms handles controls for the Remote Manipulator System (RMS). The robot arm operated by Helms, who remained inside the cabin, was used to support several tasks performed by the crew during the almost 11-day mission. Those tasks included the release and retrieval of the free-flying Shuttle Pointed Autonomous Research Tool For Astronomy 201 (SPARTAN 201), a six-hour spacewalk and the Shuttle Plume Impingement Flight Experiment (SPIFEX). Photo credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Marshall Space Flight Center Deputy Director Paul McConnaughey, left, discusses advanced manufacturing capabilities with Sen. Doug Jones of Alabama, second from left, Aug. 7 at the annual Space & Missile Defense Symposium in Huntsville, Alabama. The NASA exhibit, staffed by materials engineers Susan Barber, center, and Zack Jones, right, showcased some of the technologies, missions and hardware that will help enable humans to return to the Moon through the agency’s Artemis program.

Michael Watkins, Director of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, left, Susan Finley, who began working at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in January 1958 as a "human computer", center, and Thomas Zurbuchen, Associate Administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, right, pose for a picture with a replica of the Explorer 1 satellite during an event celebrating the 60th Anniversary of the Explorer 1 mission and the discovery of Earth's radiation belts, Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2018, at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington. The first U.S. satellite, Explorer 1, was launched from Cape Canaveral on January 31, 1958. The 30-pound satellite would yield a major scientific discovery, the Van Allen radiation belts circling our planet, and begin six decades of groundbreaking space science and human exploration. (NASA/Joel Kowsky)

NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden and Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum President Susan Marenoff-Zausner cut a ribbon at the museum marking the opening of the new Space Shuttle Pavilion which exhibits the space shuttle Enterprise while NASA Astronaut and Enterprise Commander Fred Haise, left, NASA Astronaut and Enterprise Commander Joe Engle, background, and Marie Fullerton, wife of NASA Astronaut and Enterprise Pilot Gordon Fullerton, right, look on, Thursday, July 19, 2012 in New York City. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)

Susan Kool, a researcher from the Langley Research Center, works on monitoring the Lidar Atmospheric Sensing Experiment (LASE) aboard the NASA DC-8 aircraft, Monday, Aug. 16, 2010, at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. LASE probes the atmosphere using lasers and is part of the Genesis and Rapid Intensification Processes (GRIP) experiment is a NASA Earth science field experiment in 2010 that is being conducted to better understand how tropical storms form and develop into major hurricanes. Photo Credit: (NASA/Paul E. Alers)

S92-42753 (31 July 1992) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, mission specialist assigned to fly aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour for the STS-54 mission, gets assistance to complete the donning of her spacesuit. Though not assigned to the scheduled extravehicular activity (EVA), Helms is trained in the weightless environment training facility (WET-F). She will aid astronauts Gregory J. Harbaugh and Mario Runco Jr. in their planned EVA, scheduled for January of next year, and serve a backup role. Wearing this high fidelity training version of the extravehicular mobility unit (EMU), Helms was later lowered into the 25-ft. deep WET-F pool. The pressurized suit is weighted so as to allow Helms to achieve neutral buoyancy and simulate the various chores of the spacewalk.

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - STS-83 Pilot Susan L. Still chats with White Room closeout crew member Rene Arriens as she prepares to enter the Space Shuttle Columbia at Launch Pad 39A with assistance from closeout crew worker Bob Saulnier (behind Still).

Kepler Team members Susan Thompson

Michael Watkins, Director of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, left, Susan Finley, who began working at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in January 1958 as a "human computer", center, and Thomas Zurbuchen, Associate Administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, right, reenact the famous picture of Dr. William H. Pickering, Dr. James A. van Allen, and Dr. Wernher von Braun, hoisting a model of Explorer 1 above their heads at a press conference announcing the satellite's success with a replica of the Explorer 1 satellite during an event celebrating the 60th Anniversary of the Explorer 1 mission and the discovery of Earth's radiation belts, Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2018, at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington. The first U.S. satellite, Explorer 1, was launched from Cape Canaveral on January 31, 1958. The 30-pound satellite would yield a major scientific discovery, the Van Allen radiation belts circling our planet, and begin six decades of groundbreaking space science and human exploration. (NASA/Joel Kowsky)

Assembly of a 20kW Electric Kokomotor for the SUbsonic Single Aft eNgine, SUSAN, 25% Flight Research Vehicle

Assembly of a 20kW Electric Kokomotor for the SUbsonic Single Aft eNgine, SUSAN, 25% Flight Research Vehicle

Assembly of a 20kW Electric Kokomotor for the SUbsonic Single Aft eNgine, SUSAN, 25% Flight Research Vehicle

Assembly of a 20kW Electric Kokomotor for the SUbsonic Single Aft eNgine, SUSAN, 25% Flight Research Vehicle

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Susan P. Kroskey, Chief Financial Officer at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Photo credit: NASA

K-10 Black at Black Point Lava Flow. Photo credit NASA/Susan Y. Lee
STS102-E-5158 (13 March 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms on Discovery's mid deck. The photograph was taken with a digital still camera.

Manufacturing Division (Code JM) Projects. Susan Suffel working on AEM (Animal Enclosure Module) in N-212, Model Development & Advanced Composites Br. (Code JMC)

S104-E-5092 (16 July 2001) --- Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, talks to amateur radio operators on Earth from the HAM radio workstation in the Zarya module of the International Space Station (ISS).

STS-83 Payload Specialist Roger K. Crouch and Pilot Susan Leigh Still arrive at Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility prior to Columbia's launch

ISS002-E-6288 (18 May 2001) --- Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, works with three laptop computers at the Human Research Facility (HRF) in the U.S. Laboratory. The image was taken with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-6294 (18 May 2001) --- Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, works with three laptop computers at the Human Research Facility (HRF) in the U.S. Laboratory. The image was taken with a digital still camera.
STS102-E-5206 (13 March 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms enters notes on the mid deck of the Space Shuttle Discovery. The photograph was taken with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-7607 (23 May 2001) --- Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, works with a strap on a water container in the Zvezda Service Module. The image was taken with a digital still camera.

K-10 'Red' planetary rover in the Nasa Ames Marscape: operations tests at Marscape (Ames Mars Yard) with remote operations from Ames Future Flight Centeral (FFC) Simulator with Susan Y. Lee observing.

S94-E-5004 (5 July 1997) --- Astronaut Susan L. Still, at the pilot's station on the Space Shuttle Columbia's forward flight deck, works at a lap top computer.
STS102-E-5033 (9 March 2001) --- On Discovery's mid deck, astronaut Susan J. Helms, STS-102 mission specialist, checks gear associated with her upcoming space walk.

ISS002-E-6744 (15 June 2001) --- Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, talks with mission control while working on a laptop computer in Unity Node 1.
STS102-E-5208 (13 March 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms enters notes on the mid deck of the Space Shuttle Discovery. The photograph was taken with a digital still camera.
STS102-E-5031 (9 March 2001) --- On Discovery's mid deck, astronaut Susan J. Helms, STS-102 mission specialist, checks gear associated with her upcoming space walk.

STS102-353-004 (11 March 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms translates along the longerons of the Space Shuttle Discovery during the first of two STS-102 space walks.

STS-83 Pilot Susan L. Still talks to the media at Launch Complex 39A during the crew's <a href="http://www-pao.ksc.nasa.gov/kscpao/release/1997/40-97.htm">Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test (TCDT).</a

ISS002-E-5068 (28 March 2001) --- Astronaut James S. Voss, Expedition Two flight engineer, prepares to use a soldering tool for a maintenance task in the Zvezda Service Module onboard the International Space Station (ISS). Astronaut Susan J. Helms, flight engineer, is in the background. The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-5488 (31 March 2001) --- The Expedition Two crewmembers -- astronaut Susan J. Helms (left), cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev and astronaut James S. Voss -- pose for a photograph in the U.S. Laboratory / Destiny module of the International Space Station (ISS). This image was recorded with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-5603 (18 April 2001) --- Astronauts Susan J. Helms and James S. Voss, both Expedition Two flight engineers, share a task in the Soyuz spacecraft which is docked to the International Space Station (ISS). The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-5070 (28 March 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, checks over a printout while going about routine tasks in the Zvezda Service Module onboard the International Space Station (ISS). The photo was recorded with digital still camera.

STS104-E-5198 (20 July 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, works in the Equipment Lock of Airlock Quest during its internal outfitting on STS-104. The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

Astronauts Susan Helms (#1) and Carl Walz (#2) are training in the Neutral Buoyancy Simulator (NBS) at Marshall Space Flight center with an exercise for International Space Station Alpha. The NBS provided the weightless environment encountered in space needed for testing and the practices of Extravehicular Activities (EVA).

ISS002-E-5511 (07 April 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, pauses from moving through the Node 1 / Unity module of the International Space Station (ISS) to pose for a photograph. This image was recorded with a digital still camera.

JSC2000-04612 (30 May 2000) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, mission specialist, speaks to a crowd at the crew-welcoming ceremonies at Ellington Field. The seven-member crew returned to Houston after spending its first night in Florida following the completion of the STS-101 mission.

S90-45809 (July 1990) --- Susan J. Helms, one of the 23 astronaut candidates who began a year's training and evaluation program recently, sits in the cockpit of a NASA T-38 jet trainer at Ellington Field near the Johnson Space Center.

ISS002-E-5339 (12 April 2001) --- The Expedition Two crewmembers -- astronaut Susan J. Helms (left), cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev and astronaut James S. Voss -- share a meal at the table in the Zvezda / Service Module of the International Space Station (ISS). This image was recorded with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-5335 (10 April 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms (left and astronaut James S. Voss, both Expedition Two flight engineers, pose for a photograph aboard the Zvezda/Service Module of the International Space Station (ISS). This image was recorded with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-6534 (10 June 2001) --- Expedition Two crewmembers Yury V. Usachev (left), mission commander, James S. Voss, flight engineer, and Susan J. Helms, flight engineer, share a dessert in the Zvezda Service Module. Usachev represents Rosaviakosmos. The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

STS104-E-5199 (20 July 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, works in the Equipment Lock of Airlock Quest during its internal outfitting on STS-104. The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

S90-45810 (29-31 July 1990) --- Susan J. Helms, one of 23 astronaut candidate who began a year's training and evaluation in July, climbs into a T-38 jet trainer during a survival training school at Vance Air Force Base in Oklahoma.

ISS002-E-5859 (7 May 2001) --- Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, works on an Enhanced Space Station Multiplexer / Demultiplexer (ESSMDM) at the Maintenance Work Assembly (MWA) work surface in the Destiny module. The image was taken with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-7043 (22 April 2001) --- Expedition Two flight engineers James S. Voss and Susan J. Helms work at the Canadarm2 / Space Station Remote Manipulator System (SSRMS) control station in the Destiny Laboratory. The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-7605 (16 May 2001) --- Susan J. Helms, flight engineer, and Yury V. Usachev of Rosaviakosmos, mission commander, read over procedures at the computer workstation in the Zvezda Service Module during the Expedition Two mission. The image was taken with a digital still camera.
STS102-E-5162 (13 March 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms assists astronaut Paul W. Richards, mission specialist, during suit donning on Discovery's mid deck. Shortly afterward,Richards joined astronaut Andrew S.W. Thomas for the second STS-102 space walk.

S93-25028 (15 Dec 1992) --- Astronauts assigned to fly aboard Endeavour pose near the Shuttle during a break in countdown demonstration tests. Left to right are Susan J. Helms, Donald R. McMonagle, Gregory J. Harbaugh, John H. Casper and Mario Runco Jr.
STS105-E-5226 (16 August 2001) --- Now a member of the STS-105 crew, departing Expedition Two flight engineer Susan J. Helms works out on the ergometer device on the mid deck of the Space Shuttle Discovery. The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

S100-E-5290 (23 April 2001)--- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, greets members of the STS-100 crew in the Destiny laboratory just after hatch opening. Astronaut Jeffrey S. Ashby, STS-100 pilot, documents the reunion in the background. The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

ISS002-E-6526 (8 June 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, mounts a video camera onto a bracket in the Zarya or Functional Cargo Block (FGB) of the International Space Station (ISS). The image was recorded with a digital still camera. Alternate NASA ID of 0202499.

Eileen Olejarski, manager of Florida Wildlife Hospital, and Susan Small, director of the hospital, get ready to release two great horned owls at Complex 25/29 on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station . The owls, rescued after falling from their next inside a hangar at CCAFS in April, were treated at the hospital for injuries

Eileen Olejarski, manager of Florida Wildlife Hospital, and Susan Small, director of the hospital, get ready to release two great horned owls at Complex 25/29 on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station . The owls, rescued after falling from their next inside a hangar at CCAFS in April, were treated at the hospital for injuries

ISS002-E-5357 (21 April 2001) --- Just hours before the arrival of the STS-100/Endeavour crew, astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, enjoys a brief snack in the Zvezda Service Module on the International Space Station (ISS). The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

This Space Shuttle Columbia (STS-94) onboard photo is of astronauts Susan Still and Janice Voss reviewing an Inflight Maintenance (IFM) procedure in the Microgravity Science Lab (MSL-1) science module. Astronaut Gregory Linteris works at a lap top computer in the background.

ISS002-E-5489 (31 March 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, views the topography of a point on Earth from the nadir window in the U.S. Laboratory / Destiny module of the International Space Station (ISS). The image was recorded with a digital still camera.

Flight controller Susan P. Rainwater observes as two astronauts work through a lengthy period of extravehicular activity (EVA) in the cargo bay of the Earth-looking Space Shuttle Endeavour. Rainwater's EVA console was one of Mission Control's busiest during this eleven-day Hubble Space Telescope (HST) servicing mission in Earth orbit.

ISS002-E-6723 (15 June 2001) --- Astronaut Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, and cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev, mission commander, discuss a checklist in the Destiny/U.S. Laboratory. Usachev is with Rosaviakosmos. The photo was taken with a digital still camera.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Kennedy Space Center Director Forrest McCartney and his wife, Ruth, cut a "Welcome to KSC" cake, with the assistance of NKMA member Susan Hilding, at the NASA Kennedy Management Association meeting. Photo credit: NASA

ISS002-E-7189 (23 May 2001) --- Astronauts James S. Voss and Susan J. Helms take a snack break in the Zvezda Service Module. The Expedition Two flight engineers were captured with a digital still camera by Rosaviakosmos cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev, commander.

STS-83 Pilot Susan Still (emerging from T-38 cockpit) and other members of the STS-83 crew arrive at Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility in preparation for their <a href="http://www-pao.ksc.nasa.gov/kscpao/release/1997/40-97.htm">Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test.</a

ALL Singularity University Students, Founding Members, Faculty/TP Leads, TF and Staff; Founders, Peter Diamandis, Ray Kurzweil, Salim, Bruce/Susan Faculty, Bob Richards, Dan Barry, Rob Freitas, Andrew Hessel, Jim Hurd, Neil Jacobstein, Raymond McCauley, Michael McCullough, Ralph Merkle, David Orban, David S. Rose, Chris Lewicki, David Dell,Robert A Freitas, Jr,.Staff, Tasha McCauley, Manuel Zaera-Sanz, David Ayotte, Jose Cordeiro, Sarah Russell, Candi Sterling, Marco Chacin, Ola Abraham, Jonathan Badal, Eric Dahlstrom, Susan Fonseca-Klein, Emeline Paat-Dahlstrom, Keith Powers, Bruce Klein, Tracy Nguyen, Kelly Lewis, Ken Hurst, Paul Sieveke, Kathryn Myronuk, Andy Barry. Associate Faculty, Adriana Cardenas

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - The new Florida license plate honoring the fallen astronauts of Challenger and Columbia is unveiled at the KSC Visitor Complex, in front of the Space Memorial Mirror. Participants in the dedication included (from left) Susan Berry, a teacher from Mila Elementary School in Brevard County; Sen. Bill Posey; Florida Rep. Ralph Poppell; and Kirstie McCool Chadwick, sister of William “Willie” J. McCool, who was the pilot on mission STS-107 that ended in disaster Feb. 1, 2003. The Space Mirror, 42-1/2 feet high by 50 feet wide, illuminates the names of the fallen astronauts cut through the monument’s black granite surface.

This photo shows the Shuttle tile flight test fixture under the wing of a National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration WP-3D aircraft.

View of the left cockpit and pilot's seat of the F-111 MAW aircraft. Unlike most fighter aircraft of the time, the F-111 had side-by-side seating. The pilot sat on the left side, and the weapons systems officer on the right. Both had control sticks to fly the aircraft. The two yellow and black striped handles would be used in an emergency to eject the entire F-111 cockpit. The F-111 also did not have ejection seats, but used a capsule.

View of the right cockpit of the F-111 MAW aircraft. Unlike most fighter aircraft of the time, the F-111 had side-by-side seating. The pilot sat on the left side, and the weapons systems officer on the right. Both had control sticks to fly the aircraft.

September 11th remembrance ceremony held in front of NASA Research Park Bldg-17 (Lunar Science Institute) hosted by the American Legion, Post 881, Moffett Field. Step off to Amazing Grace - POW/MIA Detail; TSgt Robert Soua, Detail Commander, 129th Security Forces, TSgt Rachel Velasco, SSgt Susan Avalos, SSgt Alex Cohen, SSgt Elias Gonzalez

JSC2001-E-25815 (23 August 2001) --- The Expedition Two crew consisting of James S. Voss (left) and Susan J. Helms, flight engineers, and cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev, mission commander, field questions at the podium in Hangar 990 at Ellington Field during the STS-105 and Expedition Two crew return ceremonies. Voss, Helms and Usachev spent five months aboard the International Space Station (ISS).

Bill Shepherd is joined by his wife following a post-landing interview in the Operations and Checkout Building about his stay as commander on the International Space Station and return to Earth aboard Discovery. Discovery returned from mission STS-102, landing at KSC March 21. Part of the STS-102 mission was to take the Expedition Two crew to the Space Station and exchange crews. Shepherd handed over command to cosmonaut Yury Usachev, who will reside on the Station for the next four months with astronauts Susan Helms and James Voss
STS105-E-5409 (20 August 2001) --- Yury V. Usachev of Rosaviakosmos, Expedition Two mission commander, prepares a drink for himself at the galley on the middeck of the Space Shuttle Discovery. Usachev and fellow Expedition Two crewmembers Susan J. Helms and James S. Voss are returning to Earth after completing their five month mission aboard the International Space Station (ISS). This image was taken with a digital still camera.

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. -- Astronauts Jim Voss (left) and Susan Helms plant a cherry laurel tree outside the KSC Headquarters building to commemorate their stay as Expedition 2 crew members aboard the International Space Station. Expedition 2, which also included cosmonaut Yury Usachev, made the space voyage to the Station on mission STS-102 in March 2001. After five months on the Station, they returned to Earth, at the KSC Shuttle Landing Facility, on mission STS-105 in August 2001
STS102-E-5345 (18 March 2001) --- The International Space Station (ISS) backdropped against black space above Earth's horizon was photographed with a digital still camera from the Space Shuttle Discovery on March 18, 2001. It is a standard practice for the shuttle to make a final fly-around of the outpost following unlinking from it. A new crew comprised of cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev and astronauts James S. Voss and Susan J. Helms will spend several months aboard the station.

September 11th remembrance ceremony held in front of NASA Research Park Bldg-17 (Lunar Science Institute) hosted by the American Legion, Post 881, Moffett Field. Step off to Amazing Grace - POW/MIA Detail; TSgt Robert Soua, Detail Commander, 129th Security Forces, TSgt Rachel Velasco, SSgt Susan Avalos, SSgt Alex Cohen, SSgt Elias Gonzalez

September 11th remembrance ceremony held in front of NASA Research Park Bldg-17 (Lunar Science Institute) hosted by the American Legion, Post 881, Moffett Field. Step off to Amazing Grace - POW/MIA Detail; TSgt Robert Soua, Detail Commander, 129th Security Forces, TSgt Rachel Velasco, SSgt Susan Avalos, SSgt Alex Cohen, SSgt Elias Gonzalez

S92-40569 (Aug 1992) --- Gregory J. Harbaugh, one of five astronaut crewmembers assigned to fly aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour for the STS-54 mission, pauses for a break during training and preparations for the six-day mission. Harbaugh will be joined by John H. Casper, mission Donald R. McMonagle, pilot; along with Mario Runco Jr. and Susan J. Helms, mission specialists. Harbaugh is in the weightless environment training facility (WET-F) at the Johnson Space Center (JSC).

September 11th remembrance ceremony held in front of NASA Research Park Bldg-17 (Lunar Science Institute) hosted by the American Legion, Post 881, Moffett Field. Step off to Amazing Grace - POW/MIA Detail; TSgt Robert Soua, Detail Commander, 129th Security Forces, TSgt Rachel Velasco, SSgt Susan Avalos, SSgt Alex Cohen, SSgt Elias Gonzalez
S105-E-5411 (20 August 2001) --- James S. Voss, Expedition Two flight engineer, poses by some fanned-out computer paper on the middeck of the Space Shuttle Discovery. Voss and fellow Expedition Two crew members Susan J. Helms and cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev are returning to Earth after completing their five month mission aboard the International Space Station (ISS). This image was taken with a digital still camera.
STS102-E-5341 (18 March 2001) --- The International Space Station (ISS) backdropped against Earth's horizon was photographed with a digital still camera from the Space Shuttle Discovery on March 18, 2001. It is a standard practice for the shuttle to make a final fly-around of the outpost following unlinking from it. A new crew comprised of cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev and astronauts James S. Voss and Susan J. Helms will spend several months aboard the station.

JSC2001-E-25813 (23 August 2001) --- Susan J. Helms, Expedition Two flight engineer, speaks from the podium in Hangar 990 at Ellington Field during the STS-105 and Expedition Two crew return ceremonies. Yury V. Usachev of Rosaviakosmos, Expedition Two mission commander, stands to Helms' left. Helms, Usachev and fellow Expedition Two crewmember James S. Voss spent five months aboard the International Space Station (ISS).
STS102-E-5379 (18 March 2001) --- The International Space Station (ISS) backdropped against black space was photographed with a digital still camera from the Space Shuttle Discovery on March 18, 2001. It is a standard practice for the shuttle to make a final fly-around of the outpost following unlinking from it. A new crew comprised of cosmonaut Yury V. Usachev and astronauts James S. Voss and Susan J. Helms will spend several months aboard the station.

Eileen Olejarski (left), manager of Florida Wildlife Hospital, and Susan Small, director of the hospital, get ready to release two great horned owls at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Complex 25/29. The owls were found in June on the floor of CCAFS Hangar G, where their nest was located. They were treated at a local veterinary hospital and then taken to the Florida Wildlife Hospital in Melbourne for care and rehabilitation before release

The STS-83 crew poses for the media at Launch Complex 39A during the crew's <a href="http://www-pao.ksc.nasa.gov/kscpao/release/1997/40-97.htm">Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test (TCDT).</a> From left to right, they are Mission Commander James D. Halsell; Pilot Susan L. Still; Mission Specialists Michael L. Gernhardt, Donald Thomas, and Janice E. Voss; and Payload Specialists Roger K. Crouch and Gregory T. Linteris

STS054-S-100 (19 Jan 1993) --- The drag chute is fully deployed as the Space Shuttle Endeavour rolls toward wheelstop at KSC's Shuttle landing facility. Landing occurred at 8:38 a.m. (EST), Jan. 19, 1993. Onboard for the six-day mission were astronauts John H. Casper, mission commander, Donald R. McMonagle, pilot, Gregory J. Harbaugh, Mario Runco Jr. and Susan J. Helms, mission specialists.

September 11th remembrance ceremony held in front of NASA Research Park Bldg-17 (Lunar Science Institute) hosted by the American Legion, Post 881, Moffett Field. Step off to Amazing Grace - POW/MIA Detail; TSgt Robert Soua, Detail Commander, 129th Security Forces, TSgt Rachel Velasco, SSgt Susan Avalos, SSgt Alex Cohen, SSgt Elias Gonzalez

Susan Small, director of the Florida Wildlife Hospital, holds a great horned owl before releasing it at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Complex 25/29. The owl is one of two found in June on the floor of CCAFS Hangar G, where their nest was located. They were treated at a local veterinary hospital and then taken to the Florida Wildlife Hospital in Melbourne for care and rehabilitation before release

Senior managers at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center pose inside the Florida spaceport’s Central Campus Headquarters building on Feb. 24, 2020, in recognition of Women’s History Month. Pictured are: Hortense Diggs, Susan Kroskey, Janet Petro, Charlie Blackwell-Thompson, Vicki Johnston, Maria Collura, Jeanne O’Bryan, Vanessa Stromer, Kim Carter, Laura Rochester, Becky Murray, Jennifer Kunz, Barbara Brown, Kathy Loftin, Jenny Lyons, Dana Hutcherson and Dicksy Chrostowski.