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CRITICAL THINKING


COSMIC PROPORTIONS


A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company’s Crew Dragon spacecraft onboard rolls out of the horizontal integration facility at Launch Complex 39A in November 2020 as prep- arations continue for the Crew-1 mission at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.


“this is the only planet we’re ever going to have, these people that we’re walking the Earth with are the only other people that we’re ever going to have on our planet. We have this common mission of taking care of Spaceship Earth.”


“I think, if everybody could back up and see that … I think it would put a lot of our problems into perspective,” she said.


For more information on NASA astronauts and the Artemis program, go to https://www.nasa.gov/.


JACQUELINE M. HAMES is an editor with Army AL&T maga- zine. She holds a B.A. in creative writing from Christopher Newport University. She has more than 10 years of experience writing and editing news and feature articles for publication.


“There are two broad categories of experiments that are on the ISS. There are those that we interact with directly, and then there are a lot of experiments that are installed after—maybe we install [the experiments] and then they run themselves, or they are on the exterior of the station, and it’s just sort of set it and forget it, we don’t interact with it routinely.”


https://asc.ar my.mil 127


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