Letters to Earth: Astronaut Don Pettit

international space station
Here is the list of entries for Letters to Earth: Astronaut Don Pettit based on the selected criteria.

July 1 - Diary of a Space Zucchini Jul 01, 2012 02:32:25 AM | Don Pettit
 
Today Gardener and his crew will depart in their seed pod; the replacement crew is ready to carry on in their place.
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Birth of a New Moon Jun 28, 2012 12:55:20 PM | Don Pettit
 
I saw the waning crescent moon, a small sliver of white rising above the Earth limb.
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Help for Sunflower Jun 18, 2012 10:43:01 AM | Don Pettit
 
Today was the peak of the Lyrid meteor shower.
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Last Day on Earth Jun 11, 2012 12:23:34 PM | Don Pettit
 
Another space poem by astronaut Don Pettit aboard the International Space Station.
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What Makes a Mission Name? May 17, 2012 09:26:13 PM | Don Pettit
 
What space station crews call our "mission" is a bit more complicated than what you might think.
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Diary of a Space Zucchini Apr 25, 2012 04:02:21 PM | Don Pettit
 
I have new leaves! I am no longer naked to the cosmos. They are not as big as before however they are just as green.
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Helen of Earth Apr 23, 2012 11:44:06 AM | Don Pettit
 
Another poem by astronaut Don Pettit aboard the International Space Station.
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A Needed Boost Apr 04, 2012 10:51:52 AM | Don Pettit
 
Here is my attempt to capture a Station re-boost last weekend using ATV (Automated Transfer Vehicle) propellant.
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Space Is My Mistress Apr 03, 2012 05:44:24 PM | Don Pettit
 
Seeing as how April is National Poetry Month…
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Seven Faces of Dr. Don Apr 02, 2012 04:58:10 PM | Don Pettit
 
By mistake I had taken a picture in the Space Station Cupola that showed the reflection of my face in all seven windows. So I set up to intentionally do this, with an artistic flair.
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Mar del Fuego Mar 14, 2012 04:31:32 PM | Don Pettit
 
Tierra del Fuego, the land of fire, was what Magellan named the tip of South America in 1520. He saw the fires set by local inhabitants who did not want the Portuguese explorer to set foot on their land.
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A Flashing Success Mar 05, 2012 11:25:50 AM | Don Pettit
 
Flashing space station with beams of light as it passes overhead had never been successfully done—until yesterday.
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Jelly on Both Sides Feb 17, 2012 04:08:42 PM | Don Pettit
 
When your slice of bread falls on the floor, everyone anxiously looks to see if it landed jelly side up or jelly side down. Simple probability gives a 50-50 chance either way, but it seems more correlated to the difficulty of cleaning that particular section of flooring. On space station the probabilities are still the same, but the results are different.
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Leonardo’s Closet Feb 23, 2012 11:45:18 AM | Don Pettit
 
On space station, we have a closet module. Its prosaic name is PMM. In a former life, it was an MPLM, a special transport container that flew up and down to space station in the back of the Space Shuttle. Made in Italy for NASA, the PMM was formally christened Leonardo—obviously named after a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle.
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The Expanding Universe of Trash Feb 01, 2012 06:51:31 PM | Don Pettit
 
It is not surprising that the humble garbage can, essential for Earth-borne civilization, is likewise essential for space station.
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The World Through a Looking Glass Jan 27, 2012 04:21:18 PM | Don Pettit
 
Looking through the cupola windows on Space Station, it’s only natural to reflect upon who we are and where we fit into the world below.
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The Eye of Issyk Kul Jan 25, 2012 04:57:30 PM | Don Pettit
 
Out of numerous Kyrgyz lakes, one in particular stands out—Lake Issyk Kul. When seen from orbit, Issyk Kul appears to be a giant eye, looking at us looking down at it.
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Whisker Cleaning Time Jan 25, 2012 04:09:32 PM | Don Pettit
 
I have never been able to shave with a safety razor without slicing my face, so I use a rotary electric razor instead. In weightlessness they work just as well, and the whiskers are captured inside the shaving head. But how does one clean out the whiskers in weightlessness?
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Perpetual Twilight Jan 20, 2012 10:50:47 AM | Don Pettit
 
Twice a year, near the winter and summer solstices, the orbit of space station nearly parallels the terminator—the fuzzy line separating day from night on the surface below. For a period of about a week, we live in what seems like perpetual twilight, being in neither full daylight nor full night. Our orbit follows the terminator, so that space station is constantly sunlit. From this vantage I can see both day and night simply by swiveling my head from left to right.
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Lost Chopstick Jan 19, 2012 12:19:10 PM | Don Pettit
 
I like to eat with chopsticks, and I bring a pair on every flight.
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Grand Views of the Grand Canyon Jan 19, 2012 11:50:32 AM | Don Pettit
 
The Grand Canyon of the Colorado River is simply amazing when viewed from an orbital perspective.
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Gone for the Season Jan 09, 2012 12:05:00 PM | Don Pettit
 
Being absent for the holidays is collateral damage for an explorer, whatever the location.
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Please Don’t Squeeze the Astronaut Dec 22, 2011 02:22:54 PM | Don Pettit
 
Taking human anatomy into account, the toilet facilities on space station have an architecture that expertly aligns the purpose to the environment (such trifles as a toilet seat are not needed when you are weightless). The Soyuz spacecraft is a different matter.
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Godspeed to Earth Dec 22, 2011 12:36:26 PM | Don Pettit
 
As you get closer to launch you shed earthly possessions, and your worldly stuff becomes meaningless. In my dorm room I give away my things, the tangible items needed on Earth that are of no use to me anymore.
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The Pieces Come Together Dec 22, 2011 12:18:27 PM | Don Pettit
 
Four days ago our rocket was in pieces, scattered across the floor of the assembly building. Like anxious parents checking on their sleeping children, we took one last peek inside our Soyuz spacecraft. Everything was tucked in where it should be.
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Me and My Spacesuit Dec 22, 2011 12:09:49 PM | Don Pettit
 
Our Soyuz spacesuit is named after the Russian word for falcon: сокол (sokol). It serves only one purpose, to keep us alive in the event of a cockpit depressurization. We venture into a place that is devoid of nearly all matter–a vacuum. This vacuum is as vast as space itself, and in a flash will remove our life-sustaining vapors with no more perturbation than an 18-wheeler smashing a jackrabbit on Route 66. And the effect on your body would be about the same.
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Six Months Turns to Ten Dec 22, 2011 03:59:30 PM | Don Pettit
 
Space Station expeditions are planned for six months. Some may be a few weeks shorter, some longer. Malfunctions in your spacecraft can impact the mission duration either way by two months or more.
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A One-Way Ticket Dec 22, 2011 11:48:32 AM | Don Pettit
 
Unlike my previous trips, this time I arrived in Russia on a one-way ticket. My bridge has been burned. And now I’m in Kazakhstan, awaiting our December 21 launch.
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The Road to Space Dec 22, 2011 12:00:32 PM | Don Pettit
 
The road to space is a long and arduous path, a meandering trip that in many ways is more demanding than the Space Station mission itself. Training to fly into space is also the next best thing to actually flying into space. And flying into space is what my job is all about.
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