Question number one...can you cook in space? Question number two...did they really bake chocolate chip cookies on the International Space Station? Apparently you can, and they did.
We hope that the 4th of July is happy and festive for you.
Remember to at some point during the day celebrate what it's all about, reflect on our armed forces and their families that are separated, and salute the United States of America!
More awe-inspiring photos from the NASA website where you can find pictures from the International Space Station. This week we check out Toronto and its city lights from space!
You can get lost checking out any location from around the world and thousands of pictures from the ISS (International Space Station).
NEXT: Check out B...
Read More
...
This is fantastic! If you need to kill some time, the NASA website is where you can find pictures from the International Space Station!
Naturally, I wanted to see if I could find my house from space, so I looked up Buffalo on the search and boom! Am...
One small step for man, one HUMONGOUS opportunity for some Buffalo elementary students!
On Tuesday, March 1, 4th through 8th graders from Buffalo's PS 97 will make contact with astronauts currently on the International Space Station (ISS)...
Trick shots are as much of a staple of the internet as cat videos, so you have to really rise above the noise to standout. This video manages to rise above. Way, way above.
If you survived the brutally cold winter we're still trying to get over, then you know how powerful Mother Nature can be. Not that you needed it, but here's another reminder.
A piece of an old Russian rocket missed the International Space Station early Saturday, but not before passing close enough to force six astronauts to seek shelter in escape capsules.
I have always been captivated by space (as in Outer Space). I don't think I could take being closed into the International Space Station, or into a capsule or Shuttle, but I love pictures/videos.
Lauren Harnett, a NASA photographer captured images of the moon at the exact moment that the space station passed across its face, what scientists call a "transit."