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Percival Lowell (13.03.1855-12.11.1916)

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Astronom Percival Lowell urodził się tego dnia w 1855 roku. Lowell z powodzeniem przewidział orbitę Plutona na wiele lat przed jego odkryciem. I to właśnie dzięki komparatorowi błyskowemu Zeissa Lowella Clyde Tombaugh odkrył Plutona w 1930 roku.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percival_Lowell
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percival_Lowell
https://twitter.com/airandspace/status/1635378653214195714

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Quincy Delight Jones, Jr. (14.03.1933-03.11.2024)

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Joyeux anniversaire (90) à Quincy Jones
https://twitter.com/spacemen1969/status/16355387530568https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quincy_Jones
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quincy_Jones

"Walking In Space" Quincy Jones (long version) (lyrics)


EDIT
Świat muzyki żegna legendę: Quincy Jones nie żyje
Onet Kultura 4 listopada 2024, 09:08

W wieku 91 lat odszedł Quincy Jones, wybitny producent muzyczny i kompozytor, który współtworzył historię światowej muzyki, współpracując z takimi gigantami jak Michael Jackson, Frank Sinatra czy Ray Charles. Jego śmierć potwierdził publicysta Arnold Robinson. Jones zmarł w niedzielę w swoim domu, otoczony przez rodzinę. (...)


https://kultura.onet.pl/muzyka/swiat-muzyki-zegna-legende-quincy-jones-nie-zyje/101qspp

Quincy Jones o Beatlesach: „Byli najgorszymi muzykami na świecie”
4 listopada 2024, 15:46 • Autor: Zofia Zając
https://www.rmf.fm/rozrywka/plotki/news,72197,quincy-jones-o-beatlesach-byli-najgorszymi-muzykami-na-swiecie.html

Nie żyje Quincy Jones – gigant XX wieku
Publikacja: 04.11.2024 19:22
https://www.rp.pl/muzyka-popularna/art41397861-nie-zyje-quincy-jones-gigant-xx-wieku

https://www.theguardian.com/music/2024/nov/04/quincy-jones-10-greatest-productions-thriller
https://www.20minutes.fr/arts-stars/culture/musique/4119382-20241104-quincy-jones-musicien-producteur-michael-jackson-mort-91-ans

Quincy Jones, Giant of American Music, Dies at 91
By Ben Ratliff Nov. 4, 2024 Updated 5:46 p.m. ET

As a producer, he made the best-selling album of all time, Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.” He was also a prolific arranger and composer of film music.



Quincy Jones, one of the most powerful forces in American popular music for more than half a century, died on Sunday night in his home in the Bel Air section of Los Angeles. He was 91.

His death was confirmed in a statement by his publicist, Arnold Robinson, who did not specify the cause.

Mr. Jones began his career as a jazz trumpeter and was later in great demand as an arranger, writing for the big bands of Count Basie and others; as a composer of film music; and as a record producer. But he may have made his most lasting mark by doing what some believe to be equally important in the ground-level history of an art form: the work of connecting.

Beyond his hands-on work with score paper, he organized, charmed, persuaded, hired and validated. Starting in the late 1950s, he took social and professional mobility to a new level in Black popular art, eventually creating the conditions for a great deal of music to flow between styles, outlets and markets. And all of that could be said of him even if he had not produced Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” the best-selling album of all time.

Mr. Jones’s music has been sampled and reused hundreds of times, through all stages of hip-hop and for the theme to the “Austin Powers” films (his “Soul Bossa Nova,” from 1962). He has the third-highest total of Grammy Awards won by a single person — he was nominated 80 times and won 28. (Beyoncé’s 32 wins is the highest total; Georg Solti is second with 31.) He was given honorary degrees by Harvard, Princeton, Juilliard, the New England Conservatory, the Berklee School of Music and many other institutions, as well as a National Medal of Arts and a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master fellowship.

His success — as his colleague in arranging, Benny Carter, is said to have remarked — may have overshadowed his talent.



Mr. Jones at his induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2013 in Los Angeles.Credit...Danny Moloshok/Invision, via Associated Press

In the late 1950s and early ’60s, Mr. Jones led his own bands and was the arranger of plush, confident recordings like Dinah Washington’s “The Swingin’ Miss ‘D’” (1957), Betty Carter’s “Meet Betty Carter and Ray Bryant” (1955), and Ray Charles’s “Genius + Soul = Jazz” (1961). He arranged and conducted several collaborations between Frank Sinatra and Count Basie, including what is widely regarded as one of Sinatra’s greatest records, “Sinatra at the Sands” (1966).

He composed the soundtracks to “The Pawnbroker” (1964), “In Cold Blood” (1967) and “The Color Purple” (1985), among many other movies; his film and television work expertly mixed 20th-century classical, jazz, funk and Afro-Cuban, street, studio and conservatory. And the three albums he produced for Michael Jackson between 1979 and 1987 — “Off the Wall,” “Thriller” and “Bad” — arguably remade the pop business with their success, by appealing profoundly to both Black and white audiences at a time when mainstream radio playlists were becoming increasingly segregated.

At 11, a Pivotal ‘Whisper’

Quincy Delight Jones Jr. was born on the South Side of Chicago on March 14, 1933, to Quincy Sr. — a carpenter who worked for local gangsters — and Sarah (Wells) Jones, a musically talented Boston University graduate. At one point in the late 1930s, Quincy and his brother, Lloyd, were separated from their mother, who had developed a schizophrenic disorder, and taken by their father to Louisville, Ky., where they were put in the care of their maternal grandmother, a former enslaved worker.

By 1943, Quincy Sr. had moved with his sons to Bremerton, Wash., where he found work in the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. They were eventually joined by his second wife, Elvera, and her three children, and four years later the family moved to Seattle. Once there, Quincy Sr. and Elvera had three more children; of the eight, Quincy Jr. and Lloyd perceived themselves to be the least favored by their stepmother and were often left to fend for themselves.

But the young Quincy was hungry to learn, and eventually to leave. At 11, he and his brother broke into a recreation center looking for food; there was a spinet piano in a supervisor’s room in the back, and as he later told the story in the BBC documentary “The Many Lives of Q” (2008), “God’s whispers” made him move toward it and touch it.

He went on to join his school band and choir, learning several brass, reed and percussion instruments, and music became his focus.

At 13, he persuaded the trumpeter Clark Terry, who was in Seattle for a month while touring with Count Basie’s band, to give him lessons after the band’s late set and before his school day began.

At 14, he met the 16-year-old Ray Charles, then known as R.C. Robinson, who had come west from Florida; they became close, and both worked for Bumps Blackwell, a local bandleader. At 15, Quincy gave Lionel Hampton an original composition and was hired for his touring band on the spot, only to be dismissed the next day by Hampton’s wife and manager, Gladys; she admonished him to go back to school.

After graduating from Garfield High School in Seattle, he attended Seattle University for one semester, then accepted a scholarship to attend the Schillinger House in Boston, now known as Berklee College of Music.

In 1951, Hampton’s band came calling again. This time, Mr. Jones joined and stayed for two years, as a trumpeter and occasional arranger. He wrote music quickly — including his first complete and credited composition, “Kingfish”— and got it sounding good quickly, through preternatural skills of charm and organization.



Mr. Jones circa 1974.Credit...A&M Records/ Michael Ochs Archives, via Getty Images

During that time he settled down with his high school girlfriend, Jeri Caldwell, and had a daughter, Jolie, in 1952, although the couple did not marry until 1957. (She was white, and the early days of their relationship and child-rearing met much disapproval. It was the first of Mr. Jones’s three marriages, all interracial.)

By the end of 1953, still only 20 and with a young daughter, he left Hampton’s band to settle in New York and work as a freelance arranger for Count Basie and the saxophonist James Moody, among others.

Mr. Jones’s true education was only beginning. In 1956, he was hired as musical director, arranger and trumpeter in the trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie’s band, which traveled under the auspices of the State Department for three months through Europe and the Middle East and then took a second trip to South America.

Mr. Jones recorded the first album under his own name, “This Is How I Feel About Jazz,” in 1956. A year later, he moved to Paris to work for Barclay Records and stayed in Europe on and off for five years as the label’s staff arranger and conductor. He took advantage of the opportunity to write for strings — because, in his view, a Black arranger was much less likely to be given the chance to do so in America — and studied music theory with Nadia Boulanger.

In 1958, Mr. Jones signed with Mercury Records. For his albums “The Birth of a Band!” and “The Great Wide World of Quincy Jones,” both released in 1959, he assembled a big band including Mr. Terry and other first-tier jazz musicians. Mr. Jones’s vision for this band grew out of the tight and smooth sound world of the 1950s Count Basie Orchestra.

Offered the job of assembling a jazz band to lead the orchestra in a musical — “Free and Easy,” about the post-abolition South, based on the work of the Black American writers Arna Bontemps and Countee Cullen and with a score by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer — Mr. Jones used many of the players from his working ensemble. The idea, as he explained in “Q,” his 2001 memoir, was for the group to “work the kinks out of the show” in Europe before it moved on to London and, potentially, Broadway.

Hobbled by a problematic script and an 11th-hour change in director, “Free and Easy” opened at the Alhambra Theater in Paris in January 1960 and closed within a few weeks.

Turning to Pop

Wanting to keep his band together at all costs, Mr. Jones kept 30 people on the payroll and assembled concerts around Europe for 10 months; deep in debt at the end of the tour, he sold publishing rights for half of his songs to get his retinue home. (He would later buy back those rights at a much higher price.)

Back in New York, the band dissolved, as did Mr. Jones’s first marriage — although, given his acknowledged chronic infidelity, that might have been some time coming. “It got so out of control,” he wrote in his memoir, “that at one point I was in love with and dating Marpessa Dawn, the leading lovely from ‘Black Orpheus’; a Chinese beauty; a French actress; Hazel Scott, the gifted, cosmopolitan ex-wife of Adam Clayton Powell Jr.; and Juliette Gréco, the Queen of French Existentialism, all at the same time.”

Mr. Jones took the job of musical director at Mercury in 1961, assembling its jazz roster: He signed Dizzy Gillespie, Gerry Mulligan, Shirley Horn and others. But this was a moment when pop was taking over; jazz’s margins, and perhaps its audience, too, were in steep decline.

He changed his focus accordingly. His first pop success was with the singer Lesley Gore, who was only 16 when he came into possession of her demo tape. “She had a mellow, distinctive voice and sang in tune, which a lot of grown-up rock ’n’ roll singers couldn’t do, so I signed her,” Mr. Jones wrote. He helped make the song “It’s My Party” (1963) into a No. 1 hit for Ms. Gore, rushing acetates to radio stations just before another version of the song, sung by the Crystals and produced by Phil Spector, which remains unreleased.

Mr. Jones ascended at Mercury, in 1964 becoming the first Black vice president of a white-owned record label. (He also won his first Grammy Award that year, for his arrangement of Count Basie’s “I Can’t Stop Loving You.”) He kept the position for less than a year, until he scored “The Pawnbroker” — one of his greatest achievements as a composer — and moved to Los Angeles to work in films and television.

His most frenetic years, professionally and personally, began in the late 1960s and stretched to 1974. He married Ulla Andersson, a 19-year-old Swedish model, in 1967 and had two children with her, Martina and Quincy III; they divorced in 1974. His dozens of film-score credits in those years included “The Deadly Affair,” “In the Heat of the Night,” “In Cold Blood,” “Mirage,” “For Love of Ivy” and “The Getaway.” And he composed theme songs and scored episodes for “Sanford and Son,” “Ironside” and two different shows starring Bill Cosby. He also produced the 1973 television tribute “Duke Ellington … We Love You Madly.”



Mr. Jones with Duke Ellington, seated, during a recording session in 1973.Credit...David Redfern/Redferns, via Getty Images

At the same time, Mr. Jones was making large-ensemble jazz-funk records as a leader, including “Walking in Space” (1969), whose title track won a Grammy for best instrumental jazz performance by a large group. He soon moved toward a more purely commercial kind of funk and R&B with “Body Heat” (1974).

He was working on “Mellow Madness,” a follow-up to “Body Heat,” when he suffered a brain aneurysm in 1974, resulting in two operations. After the first, his friends, not expecting him to live, organized a memorial concert at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. The concert went on as planned, with a roster that included Cannonball Adderley, Sarah Vaughan and Ray Charles. Mr. Jones attended, under strict orders from his neurosurgeon not to get excited.

“It felt like I was watching my own funeral,” he later wrote.

For a few years Mr. Jones slowed down, comparatively. He married the actress Peggy Lipton and had two daughters with her: Kidada Jones, an actress, model and fashion designer, and the film and television actress Rashida Jones.

He produced hit records by the Brothers Johnson, who had sung on “Mellow Madness”; contributed music to the celebrated mini-series “Roots” in 1977; and in 1978 served as musical supervisor for Sidney Lumet’s film version of the Broadway musical “The Wiz,” working with Michael Jackson for the first time. That led to their collaborations on the albums “Off the Wall,” “Thriller” and “Bad,” whose combined certified American unit-sales amount to 46 million, and whose worldwide figures are said to be more than double that.

As a joint venture with Warner Bros. Records, Mr. Jones started his own label, Qwest, in 1980. The label’s first release was the singer and guitarist George Benson’s “Give Me the Night,” which won three Grammys; otherwise, its quirky discography — the list includes not just stars like Frank Sinatra, Lena Horne and the R&B singer James Ingram, but also the post-punk band New Order, the gospel singer Andraé Crouch and the experimental jazz saxophonist Sonny Simmons — proved, if it needed proving, that Mr. Jones was not concerned only with the bottom line.



Clockwise from left, Lionel Richie, Daryl Hall, Mr. Jones, Paul Simon and Stevie Wonder recording “We Are The World” in 1985.Credit...Associated Press

His profile was raised even higher in 1985, when he produced, arranged and conducted a supergroup of more than 40 singers — including Diana Ross, Michael Jackson, Bruce Springsteen and Stevie Wonder — under the banner name USA for Africa, in “We Are the World,” a fund-raising single for famine relief.

The recording, with an accompanying video, was an international hit, becoming the industry’s first multiplatinum release, raising millions of dollars in donations and winning four Grammys, including “Song of the Year.” (The making of that record was the subject of a 2024 Netflix documentary, “The Greatest Night in Pop.”)

Shortly after that, Mr. Jones served as associate producer of Steven Spielberg’s film adaptation of Alice Walker’s novel “The Color Purple.” He also wrote the score, in less than two months.

To Tahiti and Back

Meanwhile, Mr. Jones’s third marriage failed, he became dependent on the sleeping pill Halcion, and he was not making good on plans for a follow-up to “Bad.” In 1986, he fled to one of Marlon Brando’s vacation spots — “a cluster of islands he’d owned in Tahiti since filming ‘Mutiny on the Bounty,’” as he described it in “Q.” He spent a month recovering, overcame his Halcion addiction and bounced back.

The 1989 album “Back on the Block” served as his official return, with a guest roster that typified his cross-generational, cross-stylistic dream of Black American music: Ella Fitzgerald, Miles Davis, Ice-T, Luther Vandross, Barry White. The album won six Grammys, including album of the year, and Mr. Jones was named nonclassical producer of the year.

The documentary feature “Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones,” which told his story through the recollections of his colleagues, was released in 1990. That same year, his record label became part of a larger multimedia entity, Quincy Jones Entertainment, which produced the sitcoms “The Fresh Prince of Bel Air” and “In the House” as well as the sketch show “Mad TV.” The business eventually branched out into publishing: He helped start the hip-hop magazine Vibe, and published Spin and Blaze with Robert Miller.
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« Odpowiedź #242 dnia: Marca 15, 2023, 11:49 »
(2)

Mr. Jones with students at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1991.Credit...Alain Benainous/Gamma-Rapho, via Getty Images

In 1991, Mr. Jones produced a concert at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland — of which he, in typical factotum spirit, had become a co-producer — reuniting Miles Davis with the arranger Gil Evans to play music from the albums “Sketches of Spain” and “Porgy and Bess.” It was there that he met the actress Nastassja Kinski, with whom he lived for four years, a union that produced his seventh child, Kenya Julia Miambi Sarah Jones, who became a model and is known professionally as Kenya Kinski-Jones.

By that time Mr. Jones’s life and work had become entwined with hip-hop, with or without his direct input. At his death in 1996, Tupac Shakur had sampled, for his own No. 1 hit “How Do U Want It,” a piece of Mr. Jones’s “Body Heat” — a track that has also been sampled by Das EFX, Mobb Deep and Tyrese, among others — and was dating Mr. Jones’s daughter Kidada.

According to his publicist, Mr. Jones is survived by a brother, Richard; two sisters, Margie Jay and Theresa Frank; and seven children: Jolie, Kidada, Kenya, Martina, Rachel, Rashida and Quincy III.

In his final decades, Mr. Jones dedicated much of his time to charity work through his Listen Up! Foundation; established a Quincy Jones professorship of African American music at Harvard University;  produced “Keep On Keepin’ On,” a 2014 film about the teacher-student relationship between the 89-year-old Clark Terry, Mr. Jones’s old mentor, and Justin Kauflin, a young blind jazz pianist; and released the album “Soul Bossa Nostra,” reprising songs he’d produced in the past, with appearances by Snoop Dogg, T-Pain and Amy Winehouse, who contributed a louche version of “It’s My Party” — her last commercial release before her death in 2011.

Mr. Jones stayed in the public eye. In 2018, he made headlines when he gave wide-ranging interviews to New York and GQ magazines that contained surprising comments about Michael Jackson and other subjects.

In 2017, he helped launch a video platform, Qwest TV, offering high-definition streams of jazz concerts and documentaries, and in 2022 he appeared on the album “Dawn FM” by the Weeknd, performing a monologue on the track “A Tale by Quincy.”

But even his not-fully-realized back-burner projects tell a story of their own, a kind of secondary biography of the obsessions and connections of a constantly busy man. Among them were a musical about Sammy Davis Jr.; a Cirque du Soleil show on the history of Black American music, from its African roots; a film about Brazilian carnivals; a film version of Ralph Ellison’s unfinished novel “Juneteenth”; and a film on the life of Alexander Pushkin, the Russian poet who was said to be of African origin.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/04/arts/music/quincy-jones-dead.html

Alexander Graham Bell (03.03.1847-02.08.1922)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Graham_Bell
https://www.polskieradio.pl/39/156/Artykul/869026,Aleksander-Bell-jego-wynalazek-opanowal-caly-swiat
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telefon
https://twitter.com/TheRealBuzz/status/1633465144708845570
https://twitter.com/airandspace/status/1657839831706107911
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« Odpowiedź #243 dnia: Marca 15, 2023, 11:49 »
Giovanni Schiaparelli (14.03.1835-04.07.1910)
Jest głównie znany z opracowania mapy powierzchni Marsa.
Jego imieniem nazwano europejski demonstrator lądowania EDM Schiaparelli (Entry, Descent, and Landing Demonstrator Module) w misji ExoMars 2016.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Schiaparelli
https://twitter.com/ESA_History/status/1635640799076466688

Polskie Forum Astronautyczne

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« Odpowiedź #246 dnia: Marca 16, 2023, 20:32 »
Caroline Herschel (16.03.1750-09.01.1848)

Była brytyjską astronomką urodzoną w Niemczech , której najbardziej znaczącym wkładem w astronomię były odkrycia kilku komet, w tym komety okresowej 35P/Herschel-Rigollet , która nosi jej imię.
Była młodszą siostrą astronoma Williama Herschela , z którym pracowała przez całą swoją karierę.
Była pierwszą kobietą, która otrzymała wynagrodzenie jako naukowiec i pierwszą kobietą w Anglii zajmującą stanowisko rządowe.
Była także pierwszą kobietą, która opublikowała swoje odkrycia naukowe w Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caroline_Herschel
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caroline_Herschel
https://twitter.com/c_herschelsoc/status/1633393618235916288
https://twitter.com/NASAhistory/status/1636419560122335235
https://twitter.com/ESA_History/status/1636298976101105665
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« Odpowiedź #247 dnia: Marca 23, 2023, 22:37 »
Thomas Otten Paine (09.11.1921-04.051992)

55 lat temu, 25.03.1968 , Thomas O. Paine został zaprzysiężony na zastępcę administratora NASA.
W okresie 08.10.1968-21.03.1969 był 3. Administratorem NASA.

55 Years Ago: Thomas Paine Sworn In As NASA Deputy Administrator
Mar 23, 2023

On March 25, 1968, Thomas O. Paine was sworn in as NASA’s deputy administrator. Although he came to NASA with an extensive science, engineering, and management background, he had no prior experience working with the federal bureaucracy. Joining NASA as it recovered from the tragic Apollo 1 fire and continued to work toward landing a man on the Moon by the end of decade, Paine led the agency, first as deputy administrator, then as acting administrator, and finally as NASA’s third administrator, through some its most historic times. He also faced significant challenges in the constrained budget environment following the Moon landing. He retired from NASA on Sept. 15, 1970, but remained active promoting his vision for a vibrant American space program. (...)
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/55-years-ago-thomas-paine-sworn-in-as-nasa-deputy-administrator

https://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/Biographies/paine.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_O._Paine
KHW https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=800.msg139989#msg139989
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« Odpowiedź #248 dnia: Marca 27, 2023, 19:36 »
Kathy Lueders szefowa lotów załogowych NASA przechodzi na emeryturę z końcem kwietnia.
Jej zastępca , Ken Bowersox, 1 maja zostanie nowym szefem Space Operations.
https://twitter.com/thesheetztweetz/status/1640392874784178183
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Changes Ahead as NASA’s Human Spaceflight Head Plans Retirement
RELEASE 23-035 Mar 27, 2023

Kathryn Lueders, associate administrator of NASA’s Space Operations Mission Directorate, announced Monday she will retire from the agency at the end of April. Lueders’ current deputy and astronaut, Ken Bowersox, will become the new head of Space Operations, effective Monday, May 1.

“Kathy is a tremendous public servant and a trailblazer, not only serving as the first woman to head space operations for NASA and the first woman to manage our human spaceflight program, but also championing a new way of doing business in low Earth orbit. The public-private commercial model Kathy and her team helped pioneer will return humanity to the Moon and prepare us for our next giant leap: the first crewed missions to Mars,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “Ken has been instrumental to advancing NASA’s goals and missions in low-Earth orbit and beyond, and I know Space Operations will be in good hands under his leadership.”

During her 31 years with the agency, Lueders provided strategic guidance for NASA’s human exploration of space, as well as operations that allow the agency to launch science missions to learn about Earth and the universe. Her efforts have helped NASA foster significant change in how it partners with American industry to support and expand research aboard the International Space Station – with crewed and cargo transportation to and from the station.

Lueders started her NASA career at the White Sands Test Facility in Las Cruces, New Mexico, where she was the Shuttle Orbital Maneuvering System and Reaction Control Systems Depot manager. She quickly demonstrated her engineering expertise, leading her through positions in the International Space Station Program and eventually to serve as manager of the Commercial Crew Program at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida before joining NASA Headquarters in Washington.

Her many honors include several NASA achievement awards, the Distinguished Presidential Rank Award, and the Distinguished Service Medal. In addition, she is a 2022 National Academy of Engineering member, a 2020 SpaceNews Government Leader of the Year, an inductee to the 2021 Space and Satellite Hall of Fame, and recipient of the 2021 American Astronomical Society Spaceflight Achievement Award, 2020 Woman in Aerospace Leadership Award, 2022 Space Pioneer Award by the National Space Society, and IAASS’ 2019 Leonardo da Vinci Lifetime Achievement Award.

Upon Lueders’ retirement, Bowersox will take lead for the mission directorate. His operations experience includes being acting associate administrator of the former Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate, will allow NASA to build on its success in human space exploration.

As an astronaut, Bowersox flew five orbital missions for NASA, including two Hubble Space Telescope servicing missions. He served as commander of the sixth expedition at the space station. Following his station mission, Bowersox served as the director of flight operations at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. He also has experience from working with American industry and serving on the NASA Advisory Council as chair of the Human Exploration and Operations Committee.

“Kathy and Ken have both dedicated their life’s work to NASA and our nation. I wish Kathy well during her retirement. We know countless individuals at NASA – as well as members of the Artemis Generation – will be inspired by Kathy’s service and countless contributions,” Nelson said.


Learn more about Bowersox’s experience in his biography online:
https://www.nasa.gov/offices/heo/bowersox-bio.html
-end-

Jackie McGuiness / Josh Finch
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1600 / 202-358-1100
https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/changes-ahead-as-nasa-s-human-spaceflight-head-plans-retirement

NASA space operations head Lueders to retire
Jeff Foust March 27, 2023
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In June 2020, NASA named Lueders as its next associate administrator for human exploration and operations, responsible for all NASA human spaceflight efforts, including the Artemis lunar exploration campaign. She took the job less than a month after Doug Loverro resigned from the agency amid claims he violated procurement regulations during the selection process for a first round of Human Landing System awards.

She held that position until September 2021, when NASA split the Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate (HEOMD) into two. Lueders retained the space operations part of it, overseeing the ISS, commercial cargo and crew programs, and ancillary efforts like space communications and navigation. The Space Operations Mission Directorate is also home to NASA’s Commercial Low Earth Orbit Destinations program to foster development of commercial space stations to succeed the ISS.
https://spacenews.com/nasa-space-operations-head-lueders-to-retire/

Kathy Lueders quietly made history at NASA — now she’s retiring
BY MARK R. WHITTINGTON, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR - 04/02/23 10:00 AM ET
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Lueders recalls how her father woke her up to watch the Apollo 11 moon landing, while living with her family in Japan. “And I — and, you know, at the time, I was five. And so — you know, but it’s always been this kind of distant memory of seeing people on TV standing on the moon. That’s just amazing.”
https://thehill.com/opinion/technology/3926511-kathy-lueders-quietly-made-history-at-nasa-now-shes-retiring/
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« Odpowiedź #249 dnia: Marca 31, 2023, 20:43 »
Wirginia Norwood (08.01.1927-26.03.2023)

Pracowała w Hughes Aircraft Company przez 36 lat nad szeregiem projektów, które obejmowały projektowanie anten, łącza komunikacyjne, optykę i skanery Landsat. W tym okresie zaprojektowała nadajnik mikrofalowy, którego Surveyor 1 używał do przesyłania danych i obrazów z powrotem na Ziemię.
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Wystrzelenie satelity w lipcu 1972 roku było ukoronowaniem pracy Wirginii Norwood. Stała się znana jako „matka Landsata” i przypisuje się jej pomoc w uzyskaniu zupełnie nowej perspektywy i zrozumienia planety oraz jej powiązanych cech i ekosystemów.
Virginia Norwood and the Little Scanner That Could

https://twitter.com/NASA_Landsat/status/1641084301927227395
https://twitter.com/NASAEarth/status/1641157800427487232
https://twitter.com/AsstSecTrujillo/status/1641227694045114369

Virginia Norwood, a pioneer in satellite land imaging, dies at age 96
March 31, 20231:01 PM ET By Kaitlyn Radde
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Virginia Norwood, a founding figure in satellite land imaging who developed technology to scan the surface of the moon for safe landing sites and map our planet from space, died Sunday at age 96.

Norwood is best known for developing the Multispectral Scanner System that flew on the first Landsat satellite, making her the "Mother of Landsat," according to NASA.
https://www.npr.org/2023/03/31/1167375710/virginia-norwood-satellite-land-imaging-nasa-died

Virginia T. Norwood: The Mother of Landsat


Diagram of the four-band MSS, the photomultiplier tubes and silicon photodiodes are tucked in the rear of the sensor. Image credit: Hughes/NASA

August 07, 2020 • Take out a yardstick. Flip it over to the metric side and measure out 89 centimeters long, 59 centimeters wide and 40 centimeters tall. Imagine an object that size weighing about 105 pounds (48 kg). This should give you a feel for the size of the Multispectral Scanner System that flew on the first Landsat satellite. That’s the compact size of the instrument that initiated repetitive observation of Earth’s landmasses from space—the instrument that has defined much of modern remote sensing. (...)
https://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/article/virginia-t-norwood-the-mother-of-landsat/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia_Norwood
WP https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=5004.msg182695#msg182695
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« Odpowiedź #251 dnia: Kwietnia 07, 2023, 22:49 »
Tajkonauci NIE Haisheng, YANG Liwei i FEI Junlong z ojcem chińskiego programu kosmicznego QIAN Xuesen (2006).
https://twitter.com/CNAstronauts/status/1643496309146648576
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« Odpowiedź #252 dnia: Kwietnia 08, 2023, 23:11 »
Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25.10.1881–08.04.1973)

Były próby szukania związków twórczości artysty z nauką.

Einstein, Picasso: Space, Time, and the Beauty That Causes Havoc
Physics Today 54, 12, 49 (2001)
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Picasso actually incorporated the fourth dimension into his creations before Einstein did. Miller discusses in great detail the history of a single painting, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon—completed and first exhibited in 1907, now in the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. It is generally considered a seminal painting, which led directly to what is now called “modern art.” In its final form, “the painting represents five prostitutes in a bordello. Although in close proximity, they do not interact with each other, only with the viewer—the client.”
https://physicstoday.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/1.1445548
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· Episode 31: Who Mourns for Adonais? American graphic designer Saul Bass and Spanish artist Pablo Picasso were major influences in this design for an episode in which the Enterprise is held captive by a being on Pollux IV who claims to be the Greek god Apollo. "I think the colors play a big part in this one. I can almost imagine this painted on a wall of an Italian restaurant. Right down to the olive Enterprise," notes the artist.
https://www.bigbadtoystore.com/Product/VariationDetails/8547

Picasso in a space suit: the astronaut artist orbiting Earth
Jonathan Jones Mon 19 Oct 2015 13.52 BST

Photographs taken by astronaut Scott Kelly from the International Space Station are beautiful – but could a robot do better?
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/jonathanjonesblog/2015/oct/19/scott-kelly-the-astronaut-artist-orbiting-earth

https://scitechdaily.com/scientists-discover-hidden-details-in-picasso-blue-period-painting/
https://www.houstonchronicle.com/culture/main/article/Picasso-comes-to-light-as-draftsman-in-two-9227966.php
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pablo_Picasso
https://mobile.twitter.com/eurogeosciences/status/656364752399044608
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21 July 1969.
The New York Times asks Pablo Picasso what he thinks about the news that humans have landed on the Moon.

https://twitter.com/tweetsauce/status/1521227117123440640https://twitter.com/spacemen1969/status/1644588384550113282
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« Odpowiedź #253 dnia: Kwietnia 09, 2023, 11:08 »
Orionidzie, Ty już kompletnie odleciałeś :(.

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« Odpowiedź #254 dnia: Kwietnia 14, 2023, 23:13 »
W rocznicowym roku przewidziano zorganizowanie  we Francji, Hiszpanii oraz na całym świecie  50 wystaw i wydarzeń poświęconych Picasso.

50 Events to Commemorate the 50th Anniversary of Picasso’s Death
Published on: April 10, 2023
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In both Europe and the United States, the “Picasso Celebration 1973-2023” exhibitions and programs will highlight the artist’s accomplishments throughout the 20th century and his continued influence on 21st-century artists.
https://www.tomorrowsworldtoday.com/2023/04/10/50-events-to-commemorate-the-50th-anniversary-of-picassos-death/

Sam Picasso nie pozostał obojętny na astronautyczną rzeczywistość

"pablo picasso painting of an astronaut lounging in a tropical resort in space"

https://www.prompthunt.com/search?q=pablo+picasso+painting+of+an+astronaut+lounging+in+a+tropical+resort+in+space&type=Creations


https://generrated.com/prompts/pabloPicasso

Wpływ artysty na sfery kosmiczne jest niewątpliwy.
Jeden z programów NASA został nazwany na jego cześć
https://astrobiology.nasa.gov/research/astrobiology-at-nasa/open-calls-and-abstracts/
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We note that NASA has funded much highly relevant work at JPL via R&A programs and the Astrobiology Institute, and instrument technology development via MatISSE, PICASSO, COLDtech, and other programs.
https://www.lpi.usra.edu/opag/

Krater na Merkurym został nazwany Picasso
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=92.msg183113#msg183113

Jeden z europejskich CubeSatów miał akronim PICASSO (The PICo-satellite for Atmospheric and Space Science Observations), ale bez oficjalnego nawiązywania do artysty.
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=4146.msg149965#msg149965

Mamy także planetoidę 4221 Picasso, ale tutaj kosmiczne konteksty bohatera są drugorzędne.
https://www.universeguide.com/asteroid/7458/picasso
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/(4221)_Picasso

Odwoływanie się do artystycznego geniuszu Picassa ma nie tylko ziemski wymiar:
1)
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This Picasso-like self portrait of NASA's Curiosity rover was taken by its Navigation cameras, located on the now-upright mast.
https://mars.nasa.gov/resources/4346/rovers-self-portrait/
2-2) https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=3992.msg182969#msg182969

Odwoływanie się do artyzmu Picassa w kosmicznych kontekstach jest niewątpliwe
https://twitter.com/Brazer01/status/1549317484628643841
https://twitter.com/millionanedra/status/1167237542028226560
https://mobile.twitter.com/charles_carey/status/1419157069614260224
4)
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Picasso with Astronauts 1998 is a painting by Andrew Standeven which was uploaded on September 16th, 2013.
https://pixels.com/featured/picasso-with-astronauts-1998-andrew-standeven.html

Picasso style astronaut in space vector image

https://www.vectorstock.com/royalty-free-vector/picasso-style-astronaut-in-space-vector-44205108

Zdystansowanie się jednego z najwybitniejszych artystów do pierwszego lądowania ludzi na Księżycu nadal przynosi inspirujące odwołania.
Zresztą, jakby się bliżej przyjrzeć temu co określone społeczeństwa wiedzą i sądzą o zaangażowaniu w kosmiczne przedsięwzięcia, to opinia Picassa może być powszechniej podzielana.
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But others were unmoved by the spectacle, perhaps most famously artist Pablo Picasso, whose quote in a New York Times roundup of reactions to the landing the following day remains an impressive display of apathy even in today’s notoriously cynical, meh-centric culture: “It means nothing to me. I have no opinion about it, and I don’t care,” Picasso told the Times. (...)

In any case, there may be no better time than now to echo Picasso’s deadpan words, in the wake of billionaire Jeff Bezos’s offensively expensive, 11-minute flight to space on a phallic rocket ship. Dear Jeff: I have no opinion about it, and I don’t care.
https://hyperallergic.com/664351/it-means-nothing-to-me-picasso-unimpressed-by-moon-landing/
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/air-space-magazine/unchanged-139577410/
https://twitter.com/Hana721107/status/1648452998794969088
---
https://www.bbvaopenmind.com/humanidades/artes/picasso-naturaleza-y-viceversa/
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June 1 – Pablo Picasso completes his final work, “The Embrace.”
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/50-years-ago-six-months-until-apollo-17
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