Space station honors late Hidden Figures mathematician Katherine Johnson msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
NASA Scientist Swati Mohan s Bindi Creates A Buzz On Twitter
Bindi Creates A Buzz On Twitter NASA Scientist Swati Mohan s
Bindi Creates A Buzz On Twitter Dr Swati Mohan emigrated to the US from India when she was only a year old.
Updated: February 19, 2021 4:59 pm IST
Indian-American scientist Swati Mohan led the guidance and control operations of the Mars 2020 mission.
On Thursday, as NASA s Perseverance rover made a successful landing on the Red Planet, it was Indian-American scientist Swati Mohan who led the guidance, navigation, and control operations of the Mars 2020 mission. Touchdown confirmed, said operations lead Dr Swati Mohan at around 3:55 PM Eastern Time (2055 GMT), as mission control at NASA s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena erupted in cheers. A video of the moment, released by NASA, shows Dr Mohan wearing a small
Katherine Johnson is a famous NASA mathematician whose calculations helped send the first American astronaut into space and although she never made it to the final frontier, her name will.
Northrop Grumman, an aerospace and defense technology firm, announced it has named the NG-15 Cygnus cargo ship SS. Katherine Johnson.
The craft is set to launch to the International Space Station on February 20, marking the 59th anniversary of when Johnson s calculations made it possible for John Glenn s Mercury-Atlas 6 mission.
Northrop Grumman made the announcement in celebration of Black History month, saying it is the company s tradition to name each Cygnus spacecraft after an individual who has played a pivotal role in human spaceflight.
Aldis Hodge didn't reach out to Jim Brown before portraying him in 'One Night in Miami' - The Number One magazine feat. news, reviews, movie trailers, cinema, DVDs, interviews + film & movie gossip UK & worldwide.
In the criminally underrated British 1980s cult movie How to Get Ahead in Advertising, Richard E Grant plays an advertising executive called Dennis Bagley who has a nervous breakdown over selling a pimple cream. He comes to realise that his life selling pointless things to people who do not need them is harmful, is killing the planet and is making us all not just unhappy, but insane.
Bagley’s wider argument – which he makes in a series of increasingly deranged rants – is that our ever-expanding culture of consumerism feeds an ever-ravenous capitalist beast that exploits labour for no other reason than its own enlargement. Spoiler alert: in the end, he gets better and becomes himself again, but in order to sell his pointless tincture, he has to level up. He thus becomes capitalism personified in one figure: a grotesque, hypersexed, tall-tale-teller extraordinaire.