
NASA Astronauts Josh Cassada, Nicole Mann, and JAXA astronaut Koichi Wakata pose for a photograph at SpaceX in Hawthorne, California, after a training for their upcoming Crew-5 mission.

Groups from the Granular Mechanics and Regolith Operations (GMRO) laboratory and the Electrostatics and Surface Physics Laboratory (ESPL) gather for a photograph to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Swamp Works at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Feb. 13, 2023. Studies of the mechanics of materials in a launch pad environment are performed in the GMRO lab. The team also develops technologies for handling lunar and Martian regolith, including excavator technologies, pneumatic transport of soil, and magnetic handling of soil. The ESPL group performs scientific investigations to protect flight hardware and launch equipment from the phenomenon of electrostatic discharges, commonly known as sparks.

Groups from the Granular Mechanics and Regolith Operations (GMRO) laboratory and the Electrostatics and Surface Physics Laboratory (ESPL) gather for a photograph to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Swamp Works at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Feb. 13, 2023. Studies of the mechanics of materials in a launch pad environment are performed in the GMRO lab. The team also develops technologies for handling lunar and Martian regolith, including excavator technologies, pneumatic transport of soil, and magnetic handling of soil. The ESPL group performs scientific investigations to protect flight hardware and launch equipment from the phenomenon of electrostatic discharges, commonly known as sparks.

Some of the test team for the Gulfstream Quiet Spike project assembled for a group photo on May 3, 2006. The project seeks to verify the structural integrity of the multi-segmented, articulating spike attachment designed to reduce and control a sonic boom.

ASCAN Group 23 (Class of 2021) Photo. Photo Date: March 7, 2022. Location: Building 8, Room 183 - Photo Studio. Credit: NASA/Robert Markowitz & Josh Valcarcel.

Official ASCAN Group 23 (Class of 2021) Photo. Photo Date: March 7, 2022. Location: Building 8, Room 183 - Photo Studio. Credit: NASA/Robert Markowitz & Josh Valcarcel.

ASCAN Group 23 (Class of 2021) Photo. Photo Date: March 7, 2022. Location: Building 8, Room 183 - Photo Studio. Credit: NASA/Robert Markowitz & Josh Valcarcel.

Members of the Columbia Reconstruction Project team pose for a group photo around an enlarged replica of the STS-107 crew emblem just delivered to the RLV Hangar. The emblem will be installed on an outside wall of the hangar. Inside the hangar, the team is identifying pieces of Columbia debris as they arrive at Kennedy Space Center and placing them on a grid approximating the shape of the orbiter.

Members of the Columbia Reconstruction Project team pose for a group photo around an enlarged replica of the STS-107 crew emblem just delivered to the RLV Hangar. The emblem will be installed on an outside wall of the hangar. Inside the hangar, the team is identifying pieces of Columbia debris as they arrive at Kennedy Space Center and placing them on a grid approximating the shape of the orbiter.

ISS018-E-041340 (20 March 2009) --- Expedition 18 crewmembers pose for a group photo in the Harmony node of the International Space Station while Space Shuttle Discovery (STS-119) remains docked with the station. From the right are NASA astronaut Michael Fincke, commander; Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Koichi Wakata and cosmonaut Yury Lonchakov, both flight engineers; along with NASA astronaut Sandra Magnus, STS-119 mission specialist. Magnus flew to the station on STS-126 to serve as a flight engineer for Expedition 18, and will return to Earth as mission specialist with the STS-119 crew.

ISS018-E-041334 (20 March 2009) --- Expedition 18 crewmembers pose for a group photo in the Harmony node of the International Space Station while Space Shuttle Discovery (STS-119) remains docked with the station. From the left (front row) are cosmonaut Yury Lonchakov and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Koichi Wakata, both flight engineers. From the left (back row) are NASA astronauts Sandra Magnus, STS-119 mission specialist, and Michael Fincke, commander. Magnus flew to the station on STS-126 to serve as a flight engineer for Expedition 18, and will return to Earth as mission specialist with the STS-119 crew.

NASA Astronaut Frank Rubio (far left) poses for a group photograph with his Expedition 68 crewmates in the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston following a training to prepare for the unlikely event of emergency scenarios before their mission to the International Space Station.

Group photo following the 300th NASA Dryden flight of F-15B #836.

Members of the launch team for NASA’s Ionospheric Connection Explorer (ICON) gather for a joyous group photo in front of the Northrop Grumman L-1011 Stargazer aircraft carrying the Pegasus XL rocket at the Skid Strip at Florida’s Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Nov. 10, 2019. Hours later, the rocket containing ICON air-launched from beneath the aircraft off the coast of Daytona Beach. ICON will study the frontier of space - the dynamic zone high in Earth's atmosphere where terrestrial weather from below meets space weather above. The explorer will help determine the physics of Earth's space environment and pave the way for mitigating its effects on our technology, communications systems and society.

S119-E-007763 (24 March 2009) --- STS-119 crewmembers pose for a group photo following a joint news conference in the Harmony node of the International Space Station while Space Shuttle Discovery remains docked with the station. From the left (bottom row) are NASA astronauts Tony Antonelli, pilot; Lee Archambault, commander; and Joseph Acaba, mission specialist. From the left (top row) are astronauts Steve Swanson, Richard Arnold and John Phillips, all mission specialists.

S119-E-007770 (24 March 2009) --- STS-119 crewmembers pose for a group photo following a joint news conference in the Harmony node of the International Space Station while Space Shuttle Discovery remains docked with the station. From the left (bottom row) are NASA astronauts Tony Antonelli, pilot; Lee Archambault, commander; and Joseph Acaba, mission specialist. From the left (top row) are astronauts Steve Swanson, Richard Arnold and John Phillips, all mission specialists.

S119-E-007775 (24 March 2009) --- STS-119 crewmembers pose for a group photo following a joint news conference in the Harmony node of the International Space Station while Space Shuttle Discovery remains docked with the station. From the left (bottom row) are NASA astronauts Tony Antonelli, pilot; Lee Archambault, commander; and Joseph Acaba, mission specialist. From the left (top row) are astronauts Steve Swanson, Richard Arnold and John Phillips, all mission specialists.

Small Business Council meeting hosed by NASA Ames Research Center: Naeemah Lee, H.Q., Cheryl Harrison, JSC, Gil DelVaile, GSRC, Mary Helen Ruiz, JPL, David Grove, HQ, John Cecconi, NSSC, Sandra Morris, HQ/OP, Michelle Stracener, SSC, Randy Manning, LaRC, Vernon Vann, LaRC, David Brock, MSFC, Ben Henson, MSFC, Larry Third, KSC, Robert Medina, DFRC, Christine Munroe, ARC, Lupe M. Velasquez, ARC, Monica F. Craft, JSC (?), Angel Castillo, NMO, Timothy C Pierce, GRC, Charles Williams, JSC, Jennifer Perez, GSFC, Rosa Acevedo, GSFC, Glenn A Delgado, HQ/Assoc Admin for Small Business, Tabisa Tepfer, HQ/OSBP/MORIAssoc, Richard Mann, HQ/OSBP

jsc2024e050151 (May 13, 2024) --- NASA’s SpaceX Crew-9 members poses for a group photo in front of the launch tower at Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. From left are, Mission Spedialist Alexsandr Gorbunov from Roscosmos; Mission Specialist Stephanie Wilson from NASA; Commander Zena Cardman from NASA; and Pilot Nick Hague from NASA. Credit: SpaceX

jsc2024e050145 (May 13, 2024) --- NASA’s SpaceX Crew-9 members poses for a group photo in front of the White Room located at the end of the crew access arm on the launch tower at Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. From left are, Pilot Nick Hague from NASA; Mission Specialist Stephanie Wilson from NASA; Mission Spedialist Alexsandr Gorbunov from Roscosmos; and Commander Zena Cardman from NASA. Credit: SpaceX

jsc2024e074729 (Nov. 13, 2024) --- The crew members of the International Space Station’s Expedition 74 crew pose for a group photo after a training session at the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Back row from left, Kimiya Yui, Oleg Platonov, Sergei Mikaev, and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov. Front row from left: Zena Cardman, Mike Fincke, and Chris Williams.

S119-E-007785 (24 March 2009) --- STS-119 crewmembers and astronaut Sandra Magnus (center, top row), Expedition 18 flight engineer, pose for a group photo following a joint news conference with the Expedition 18 crewmembers from the Harmony node of the International Space Station while Space Shuttle Discovery remains docked with the station. Also pictured from the left (bottom row) are NASA astronauts Steve Swanson, mission specialist; Tony Antonelli, pilot; Lee Archambault, commander; and Joseph Acaba, mission specialist. Pictured on the top row with Magnus are astronauts Richard Arnold (left) and John Phillips, both mission specialists. Magnus, who joined the station’s crew in November, is being replaced by Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut (JAXA) Koichi Wakata (not pictured), who arrived at the station with the STS-119 crew.

S119-E-007782 (24 March 2009) --- STS-119 crewmembers and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut (JAXA) Koichi Wakata (center, top row), Expedition 18 flight engineer, pose for a group photo following a joint news conference with the Expedition 18 crewmembers from the Harmony node of the International Space Station while Space Shuttle Discovery remains docked with the station. Also pictured from the left (bottom row) are NASA astronauts Steve Swanson, mission specialist; Tony Antonelli, pilot; Lee Archambault, commander; and Joseph Acaba, mission specialist. Pictured on the top row with Wakata are astronauts Richard Arnold (left) and John Phillips, both mission specialists. NASA astronaut Sandra Magnus (not pictured), who joined the station’s crew in November, is being replaced by Wakata, who arrived at the station with the STS-119 crew.

S119-E-007794 (24 March 2009) --- Eight out of the ten crewmembers on the International Space Station pose for a group photo following a joint news conference in the Harmony node while Space Shuttle Discovery remains docked with the station. From the left are NASA astronauts Tony Antonelli, STS-119 pilot; Lee Archambault, STS-119 commander; and Joseph Acaba, STS-119 mission specialist. From the left (middle row) are Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut (JAXA) Koichi Wakata, Expedition 18 flight engineer; and NASA astronaut Sandra Magnus, STS-119 mission specialist. From the left (back row) are astronauts Steve Swanson, Richard Arnold and John Phillips, all STS-119 mission specialists. Magnus, who joined the station’s Expedition 18 crew in November 2008, is being replaced by Wakata, who arrived at the station with the STS-119 crew.

NASA/Army UH-60 Individual Blade Control (IBC) test on LRTA in 40x80ft. Wind Tunnel at Ames Research Center

Acquisition Division (Code-JA) staff : Seated L-R; Julie Donley, Connie Cunningham, Grace Ann Weiler; Standing Back L-R; Gene Moses, Charles Duff

Visiting Numa Elementary School, Fallon, Navada Winners of the LCROSS Navigaiton Challenge presented award by Linda Conrad, Ames Education Office.

Army/Sikorsky Active Rotor Test TR40-019 in teh 40x80ft wind tunnel at Ames Research Center.

Acquisition Division (Code-JA) staff with Branch Chiefs: Seated L-R; Connie Cunningham, Dee Morison, Carolyn LaFollette: Standing L-R; Gene Moses, Charles Duff, Daryl Wong

Acquisition Division (Code-JAI) Acquisition Branch for Information Systems; Front Row L-R; Errol Ridgway, Lupe Velasquez, Dolores Morrison, Sue King, Pat Williams: Back Clockwise from bottom; Wendy Takeguchi, Jill Willard, Joanne Comstock, Carlos Torrez, Alma Garcia

Members of NASA leadership, leadership with the agency’s Exploration Ground Systems Program, and contractor Amentum Services, Inc. leadership pose for a group photo underneath a banner displaying the Artemis II mission insignia outside High Bay 3 at the Vehicle Assembly Building at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, April 10, 2025. The design designates the mission as “AII,” signifying not only the second major flight of the Artemis campaign, but also an endeavor of discovery that seeks to explore for all and by all. Framed in Apollo 8’s famous Earthrise photo, the scene of the Earth and the Moon represents the dual nature of human spaceflight, both equally compelling: The Moon represents our exploration destination, focused on discovery of the unknown. The Earth represents home, focused on the perspective we gain when we look back at our shared planet and learn what it is to be uniquely human. The orbit around Earth highlights the ongoing exploration missions that have enabled Artemis to set sights on a long-term presence on the Moon and soon, Mars.

Members of NASA leadership, leadership with the agency’s Exploration Ground Systems Program, and contractor Amentum Services, Inc. leadership pose for a group photo underneath a banner displaying the Artemis II mission insignia outside High Bay 3 at the Vehicle Assembly Building at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, April 10, 2025. The design designates the mission as “AII,” signifying not only the second major flight of the Artemis campaign, but also an endeavor of discovery that seeks to explore for all and by all. Framed in Apollo 8’s famous Earthrise photo, the scene of the Earth and the Moon represents the dual nature of human spaceflight, both equally compelling: The Moon represents our exploration destination, focused on discovery of the unknown. The Earth represents home, focused on the perspective we gain when we look back at our shared planet and learn what it is to be uniquely human. The orbit around Earth highlights the ongoing exploration missions that have enabled Artemis to set sights on a long-term presence on the Moon and soon, Mars.

The Mars Sample Return Campaign Science Group gathered at the Keck Institute for Space Studies at Caltech for an initial meeting on June 28-29, 2022. This June 28 photo includes team members who attended in person; several others attended virtually or were not able to participate. The committee will provide oversight with the goal of maximizing the scientific potential of Mars rock and sediment samples that would be returned to Earth for in-depth analysis, as part of the Campaign. https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA25442

ISS003-E-5190 (17 August 2001) --- The STS-105 crew members pause for this group photo in the Destiny laboratory on the International Space Station (ISS). Clockwise from bottom are, Scott J. Horowitz and Frederick W. (Rick) Sturckow, mission commander and pilot, respectively, Patrick G. Forrester and Daniel T. Barry, both mission specialists. This image was taken with a digital still camera.

ISS003-E-7033 (23-31 October 2001) --- The Soyuz Taxi crewmembers assemble for a group photo in the Zvezda Service Module on the International Space Station (ISS). From the left are Flight Engineer Konstantin Kozeev, Commander Victor Afanasyev, and French Flight Engineer Claudie Haignere. Afanasyev and Kozeev represent Rosaviakosmos, and Haignere represents ESA, carrying out a flight program for CNES, the French Space Agency, under a commercial contract with the Russian Aviation and Space Agency. This image was taken with a digital still camera.

ISS003-E-7044 (October 2001) --- Astronaut Frank L. Culbertson, Jr. (center), Expedition Three mission commander, flanked by cosmonauts Mikhail Tyurin and Vladimir N. Dezhurov, both flight engineers, assemble for a group photo in the Zvezda Service Module on the International Space Station (ISS). Tyurin and Dezhurov represent Rosaviakosmos. This image was taken with a digital still camera.

NASA Dryden Millennium All-Hands photo

ISS006-E-50610 (28 April 2003) --- The Expedition Six and Seven crews pose for a group photo in the Zvezda Service Module on the International Space Station (ISS). From the left (front row) are astronauts Edward T. Lu, Expedition Seven NASA ISS science officer and flight engineer; Donald R. Pettit, Expedition Six NASA ISS science officer; and cosmonaut Yuri I. Malenchenko, Expedition Seven mission commander. From the left (back row) are astronaut Kenneth D. Bowersox, Expedition Six mission commander, and cosmonaut Nikolai M. Budarin, Expedition Six flight engineer. Budarin and Malenchenko represent Rosaviakosmos.

ISS004-E-10631 (27 April 2002) --- The Soyuz Taxi crewmembers pose for a group photo in the Zvezda Service Module on the International Space Station (ISS). From the left are Commander Yuri Gidzenko, who was a member of the first resident crew of the ISS; Flight Engineer Roberto Vittori of the European Space Agency (ESA); and South African space flight participant Mark Shuttleworth. The “taxi” crew arrived at the orbital outpost on April 27, 2002 at 2:56 a.m. (CDT) as the two vehicles flew over Central Asia. Gidzenko represents Rosaviakosmos.

NASA and SpaceX managers and International partners gathered for a group photo at the conclusion of the SpaceX Crew-4 Flight Readiness Review at Kennedy Space Center in Florida on April 15, 2022. NASA and SpaceX mission managers held the review to confirm the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon spacecraft are ready for launch. Crew-4 is scheduled to launch to the International Space Station from Kennedy’s Launch Complex 39A on April 23, 2022, as part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program. Liftoff of the Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon spacecraft is targeted for 5:26 a.m. EDT.

ISS006-E-50609 (28 April 2003) --- The Expedition 6 and 7 crews pose for a group photo in the Zvezda Service Module on the International Space Station (ISS). From the left (front row) are astronauts Edward T. Lu, Expedition 7 NASA ISS science officer and flight engineer; Donald R. Pettit, Expedition 6 NASA ISS science officer; and cosmonaut Yuri I. Malenchenko, Expedition 7 mission commander. From the left (back row) are astronaut Kenneth D. Bowersox, Expedition 6 mission commander, and cosmonaut Nikolai M. Budarin, Expedition 6 flight engineer. Budarin and Malenchenko represent Rosaviakosmos.

The Mars Sample Return Campaign Science Group gathered for their first meeting, at the Keck Institute for Space Studies at Caltech, and took a group photo. This June 28 photo includes team members who attended in person; several others attended virtually or were not able to participate. The committee will provide oversight with the goal of maximizing the scientific potential of Mars rock and sediment samples that would be returned to Earth for in-depth analysis, as part of the Campaign. https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA25443

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

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

Singularity University Students and Founders; Founders, Peter Diamandis, Ray Kurzweil.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Carolyn Garcia leads the the staff to their places in the line to keep the numbers uniform.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. In photo Doreen Cohen, Gabe Lozano and wife, Paul McKim, Karen Bradford

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Tim Naumowicz holding the line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. JP Wiens taking pictures

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Jim Taylor and Jennifer Kremer

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. David Morse leads the the staff to their places in the line to keep the numbers uniform.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Dominic Hart shooting photo's.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. David Morse leads the the staff to their places in the line to keep the numbers uniform.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. David Morse leads the the staff to their places in the line to keep the numbers uniform.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Dominic Hart shooting photo's.

Singularity University Founding Members,Faculty/TP Leads, TF's, GSP10 Directors Founders, Peter Diamandis, Ray Kurzweil. 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

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Singularity University 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.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Jim Taylor and Jennifer Kremer in the line up.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Singularity University Students and Founders; Founders, Peter Diamandis, Ray Kurzweil.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Tech Partners group in line up.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Femmy McGrath and ......

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Donald James waving.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Sheila Johnson orginazing the line up.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line. Sheila Johnson orginazing the line up.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.

Ames 70_year picture day on Flight line.
