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Page 7 - ஆம்ஸ்ட்ராங் விமானம் ஆராய்ச்சி மையம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Fairmont tech firm develops software for NASA project

1 of 2 NASA’s all-electric experimental aircraft X-57 Maxwell prepares to undergo ground vibration testing at NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in California. A goal of X-57 is to help the Federal Aviation Administration set certification standards for emerging electric aircraft markets. NASA/Lauren Hughes NASA s all-electric X-57 Maxwell aircraft undergoes high voltage ground testing at NASA s Armstrong Flight Research Center in California. The aircraft is running, in part, with software designed here in Fairmont. NASA/Lauren Hughes FAIRMONT — A small Fairmont tech company is creating software for NASA. TMC Technologies of West Virginia has been working with NASA on its first all-electric experimental aircraft X-57 “Maxwell” or X-plane. TMC and its senior systems engineer, Steve Yokum, have been developing a software used to make sure everything in the plane is running as planned.

Flight Test Files: A-5A Vigilante

There has long been a close aerospace research partnership between NASA (and it’s forebear, the N.A.C.A.) and the U.S. military. This association is perhaps best exemplified by their co-located facilities in California’s Mojave Desert centered around what was once known as Muroc Dry Lake Bed (now known as Rogers Dry Lake) an ancient, long-evaporated lake, with an extremely flat and hard-packed floor; it was perfect terrain for a natural runway of extreme length. Muroc was where many of America’s first experimental jet and rocket planes took flight, including the Bell XS-1, the rocket-plane which first broke the speed of sound back in October, 1947. Back then, most people simply referred to the place as Muroc… it was a deeply inhospitable location; arid, dusty, and bleached incessantly by the searing heat of the sun during much of the year (and icy cold without it). There were no amenities to speak of either, during those early days, so no one but the hardiest and most daring

On a Changing Planet, NASA Goes Green – Climate Change: Vital Signs of the Planet

In Brief: In addition to collecting data on humanity s effect on our planet, NASA is working toward becoming more sustainable. NASA is responsible for collecting much of the data that people use to explain humanity’s environmental impact on Earth, from documenting climate change and its impacts on ice, sea level, and weather patterns, to monitoring the health of forests and the movement of fresh water. But NASA doesn’t just report the data. It also acts on it. NASA facilities across the United States are each working toward becoming more sustainable workplaces. Across 47 million square feet (4.3 million square meters) and 5,000 buildings, NASA works to fulfill its mission of revealing the unknown while lessening its demand on the planet’s resources.

Drones, radars, pizza makers among finalists for Hardware of the Year at the GeekWire Awards

Drones, radars, pizza makers among finalists for Hardware of the Year at the GeekWire Awards
geekwire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from geekwire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Wings of exploration: reflecting on the 40th anniversary of the space shuttle

Wings of exploration: reflecting on the 40th anniversary of the space shuttle
spaceflightinsider.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from spaceflightinsider.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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