If you ever wanted to have easy access to watch a jet go Mach 10 or view 1960s film footage of a Lunar Landing Research Vehicle lifting off, NASA has a treat for you.
For the past several days, the space agency’s Armstrong Flight Research Center has posted on YouTube hundreds of unearthed video clips of various flight tests, rocket launches, Mars Rovers, and other just plain cool stuff for anybody who’s fascinated by space and the journey to get there.
The center reportedly selected 500 videos that it would migrate from a little-used corner of the internet on the Dryden Flight Research Center website to YouTube. NASA Armstrong is doing so because it wants fans to have easier access to some of its archived history.
“NASA has so much digital content that tends to be overlooked by the public, given the difficulty that exists in actually locating the content,” Rebecca Richardson, social media manager for NASA Armstrong, told Motherboard. “Our hope is that by moving the content to more accessible platforms, NASA fans and media personnel will be able to access the content more regularly and become more fully immersed in what is happening at NASA.”
Here are some of the coolest videos we found so far.
This is a test flight from the mid-1960s of a Lunar Landing Research Vehicle over California’s Mojave Desert:
Video player from: YouTube (Privacy Policy)
This is a 2003 video from the Mojave Desert when researchers were testing the Mars Exploration Rover
Video player from: YouTube (Privacy Policy)
Here’s a 66-second clip from the mid-1940s that shows the unloading and reassembly of a D-558 Skystreak, a plane that broke a world record four months later by flying at 640.74 mph.
Video player from: YouTube (Privacy Policy)
And finally, if you like explosions, here’s a video montage of a Controlled Impact Demonstration from 1984.
Video player from: YouTube (Privacy Policy)
The post NASA has put hundreds of the coolest testing videos you can imagine on YouTube appeared first on The Daily Dot.
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Well well well
Nasa throwing a few bones out to everybody huh? Excellent to see these vid’s none the less … I’m wondering if they got any of the ‘sneaky un-american demolition jobs’ passed off as ‘Arab’s learning to fly videos’ on the world trade center buildings?
Nice one Dean. I think we’d all like to see that footage;)
Interesting nevertheless, and I wonder how many of these weird and wonderful devices got mistaken for UFOs over the years?