Today we talked about the environment in space. We played a few games and learned a lot of lessons. NASA has identified six extremes about space that we don’t really find here on earth. Can you guess any of them? Go ahead try before reading any longer … are you guessing … here they are:
What makes space extreme?
You float
There is no air
There is no pressure
It’s very hot
It’s very cold
There are flying objects called meteors

We made our way to the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB). This is where the Space Shuttle is attached to the external tank (ET) and the rocket boosters (RB – no, not Repulse Bay). Harry, our guide, gave us tour through the third largest building in the world according to volume. This was over 500 feet tall and massively wide! Inside I walked around the RB and ET. They had just been put together to get ready for the next flight in August. Once completed they head to the launch pad by the crawler. These machines move at a speed of two miles per hour when empty. When loaded with the shuttle, they move at a speed of one mile per hour! They were huge! The crawler moves 35 feet per gallon, that translates to 150 gallons per hour. Th crawler was awesome! After seeing all of this I felt like I have become a piece of history.
Our next stop was by one of the most famous sights of a launch … the press area and the countdown clock. I remember as a kid watching the countdown for the Apollo moon rockets as they were preparing for lift off. Another piece of history I could reach out and touch.
Third stop on the tour was the launch pad 39B. We circled the pad. I could just visualize all the scenes I had watched on television of the launches, including the last shuttle lift off. Most of what we see is steam. 400,000 gallons of water are poured over the launch pad seconds before lift off. Why water? It helps to cut down the vibration and noise!
Our day ended at the Saturn V museum. This is the rocket that carried the Apollo astronauts to the moon. When fully fueled, this rocket had the power of an atomic bomb. How would you like to sit on top of that?! We saw one of the only three Saturn V rockets left in existence. I was able to see a presentation on the moon landing. I didn’t realize but Neil Armstrong, the commander of the first moon landing, had to take over the controls of the Lunar Lander to land, all without Mission Control knowing what was going on. They had lost communication with NASA.
What a day … what a fantastic two weeks! Thanks for making the journey with me. Hope to see you in August!
Astronut Dave


