Explanation:
What would it be like to fly a space shuttle?
Although the last of NASA's space shuttles has now been retired, it is still fun to contemplate sitting at the controls of one of the humanity's
most sophisticated machines.
Pictured above is the
flight deck
of Space Shuttle Endeavour,
the youngest shuttle and the second to last ever
launched.
The numerous panels and displays allowed the computer-controlled orbiter to enter the top of
Earth's atmosphere at greater than the
speed of sound
and -- just thirty minutes later --
land
on a runway like an airplane.
The retired space shuttles are now being sent to museums, with Endeavour being sent to
California Space Center in Los Angeles, California, Atlantis to the
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex on Merritt Island, Florida, and Discovery to the
Udvar-Hazy
Annex of the National Air and Space Museum in Chantilly, Virginia.
Therefore sitting in a
shuttle pilot's chair and personally contemplating the thrill of human space flight may actually be in your future.
Developing Gallery:
Flyover of Space Shuttle Discovery atop a 747