Mission Control, located at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
Physics and Mission Control.
To make sure it can go the distance and back
NASA actually has several Mission Control Centers, though the main MCC, and the one most people are familiar with, is the Manned Flight Center (MCC-H) at Johnson Space Center in Houston, which directs all Manned Flight activities (e.g., Shuttle, International Space Station, etc.) Up until the mission clock starts advancing, Kennedy Space Center Launch Control is in charge of the mission; after the countdown ends and the mission begins, control switches to MCC at JSC. Since MCC-H is in a hurricane sensitive zone, there are backup MCC facilities at Kennedy Space Center at MCC in Moscow for ISS operations. There are actually several Flight Control rooms in the MCC building - each is manned by a dozen up to 20 controllers.
Mission control. Before launch it is controlled from Kennedy Space Center, but from the time it clears the launch tower it is controlled from Houston.
Mission Control, located at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
Physics and Mission Control.
space vehicles and missiles
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Bong Wie has written: 'Space vehicle dynamics and control' -- subject(s): Space vehicles, Dynamics, Control systems
It plans and controls space missions.
To make sure it can go the distance and back
William L. Grantham has written: 'NASA future mission needs and benefits of controls' -- subject(s): Control systems design, Large space structures, Space missions, Technology assessment, Aerospace vehicles, NASA programs
Space Shuttles Discovery and Atlantis were most often used for HST Servicing Missions, due to their larger cargo bays.
need lots of concentration and meditation, complete control on mind
It depends on the mission. All launch vehicles are controlled by their individual launch facilities until the mission clock starts, which is at the end of the "countdown". The countdown is a negative clock count to zero; once the vehicle launches, the mission clock starts into a positive clock count. At the point the vehicle reaches space, the mission control center takes over. For the shuttle program, Mission Control is in Houston at the Johnson Space Center. The Hubble Telescope, one of my old programs, is controlled from the Space Telescope Science Institute at Johns Hopkins University. Deep Space missions, such as the Mars probes, Cassini and Galileo are controlled from the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, CA. JPL also controls the furthest craft from Earth, the Voyager probe launched in the early 70's and now headed out of the solar system. Some satellites are controlled from other non-NASA stations, such as military satellites and commercial satellites.
Space vehicles are ones that travel in outer space. These vehicles help record scientific data and send it to Earth.