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Shuttle engine test
For the first time since Hurricane Katrina, NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi conducts a test-firing of a space shuttle main engine. The engine was run as part of a certification series on the Advanced Health Management System, which monitors engine performance.

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Edwards air show
Edwards Air Force Base hosted an open house and air show this past weekend. NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center demonstrated some of its specialized aircraft -- a highly modified NF-15B, a high-altitude ER-2, and F/A-18 and T-34. On the ground, a variety of specialized air and space vehicles were on display in the NASA exhibit, ranging from the Mars rovers to the 747 space shuttle carrier aircraft.

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ISS science 'suitcases'
Scientists eagerly examine suitcase-like packages, called the Materials International Space Station Experiments, or MISSEs, after return to Earth. The MISSE packages were flown outside the orbiting station to expose different materials to the space environments for study.

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Tracking hurricanes
This 2005 Atlantic hurricane season has a been a record-breaker. Satellite imagery since June 1 has been compiled into this movie to track the 21 named storms as they formed and traveled, many making landfall.

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Hurricane Wilma
International Space Station cameras captured this incredible video of Hurricane Wilma and its well-defined eye from an altitude of 220 miles. Wilma was packing winds of 175 miles an hour as a Category 5 storm when the station flew overhead.

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Launches delayed in the crossfire of Boeing strike
BY SPACEFLIGHT NOW
Posted: November 2, 2005

More than a thousand Boeing workers hit the picket lines this morning, snarling plans to launch a critical U.S. national security satellite and environmental research spacecraft aboard Delta rockets this year.

Delta 4
When this Delta 4 rocket can launch the GOES-N spacecraft from Cape Canaveral isn't clear. Photo: Carleton Bailie for The Boeing Company
 
Differences over health benefits and retirement plans remained unsolved despite recent talks between Boeing and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.

The union includes 365 workers at the Delta program's lead Huntington Beach facility in California, plus 288 at Cape Canaveral and 100 at Vandenberg Air Force Base launch sites. The strike also affects workers at the rocket manufacturing plant in Decatur, plus other locations in Alabama and California.

Union members voted to reject Boeing's offer for a three-year contract, citing the company's desire to cut retiree health care coverage for new workers, among other complaints.

Boeing says the contract included pay hikes and improved pensions.

Attempts by a federal mediator to renew discussions between both sides on Tuesday failed to reach a consensus.

The strike began at 12:01 a.m. today.

Caught in the crossfire are several Delta rockets standing on launch pads at Cape Canaveral and Vandenberg. Already delayed because of the strike is NASA's mission to place a pair of atmospheric research satellites into orbit from California. That launch had been scheduled for November 7, but was called off last week because the space agency didn't want its payloads sitting on the pad during a strike. As a result, the spacecraft were left inside a processing hangar instead of being moved to the pad for mating to the rocket last Monday as scheduled.

Also at Vandenberg is a larger Delta 4 rocket that is supposed to haul a U.S. National Reconnaissance Office spy satellite cargo into orbit by year's end. It too is waiting for the payload to be brought out to the pad.

Meanwhile, a Delta 4 at Cape Canaveral has the GOES-N weather satellite already mounted aboard for launch sometime this month. Because this launch campaign has progressed much further than the other two waiting at Vandenberg, Boeing says the company is looking to see if the union members are still needed for any remaining pre-launch preparations.