Showing 1 - 10 of 33

The AirSpace logo is overlaid on a zoomed in star with a background of smaller stars and galaxies

December 25, 2025

The Life Cycle of Stars

Story | AirSpace Podcast

Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how we wonder . . . well, where to even begin? We brought in one of the Museum's astronomy educators for a stellar conversation about the birth, life, and death of stars. 

Purple and pink logo of AirSpace

October 09, 2025

AirSpace Bonus! There's More to That: Auroras

Story | AirSpace Podcast

While you wait for AirSpace Season 11, check out this episode on the science and history of auroras from our friends at Smithsonian Magazine's podcast, There's More to That.

AirSpace, a podcast, logo

March 27, 2025

Space Race: The Prequel (Part Two)

Story | AirSpace Podcast

We pick up where Part One left off! When you hear 'space race' you probably (correctly) think about the 1960s Soviet Union v. U.S. race to put an astronaut on the Moon. But a few hundred years before, the space race was all about Venus. 

An image of the transit of Venus, zoomed in over the Sun, with the AirSpace logo overlaid upon it.

March 12, 2025

Space Race: The Prequel (Part One)

Story | AirSpace Podcast

When you hear 'space race' you probably (correctly) think about the 1960s Soviet Union v. U.S. race to put an astronaut on the Moon. But a few hundred years before, the space race was all about Venus.

Airship LZ-126 arrives at Naval Air Station Lakehurst, New Jersey, after a flight across the Atlantic from Germany, 15 October 1924. After delivery to the U.S. Navy, it became the USS Los Angeles (ZR-3). Note that the airship has no markings. (Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the Collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command, NH 42024.)

April 05, 2024

An Unparalleled Vantage Point: The USS Los Angeles and the 1925 Solar Eclipse

Story

On January 25, 1925, J.H. Klein Jr., the commander of the airship USS Los Angeles, described an incredible sight he had witnessed to the Boston Globe.  He described his experience and stated it was, "A most spectacular sight. The sky at the horizon was a flood of merging orange and red light. Overhead the ceiling was blue-black, while all about was the darkness of twilight.” This incredible event occurred during the 1925 solar eclipse off the coast of New York City, and scientists and crew aboard the USS Los Angeles had a front row seat to the beauty and splendor of the occurrence.

A black-and-white portrait of Amelia Earhart standing on an airport tarmac, with her twin-propellered airplane behind her.

March 20, 2024

Lost and Found?

Story | Air & Space Quarterly

What’s new in aviation and space. The latest on the search for Amelia Earhart’s Lockheed 10-E Electra

AirSpace, a podcast, logo

March 13, 2024

AirSpace Season 8, Episode 12: When the Sun Went Out

Story | AirSpace Podcast

In 1142 a total solar eclipse with much the same path as the one coming up April 8. It was also the sign in the sky the Seneca needed to join the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, a representative democracy that would govern six tribes below Lakes Erie and Ontario.

AirSpace, a podcast, logo

February 26, 2024

AirSpace Season 8, Leap Day Bonus: Accounting for the Ish

Story | AirSpace Podcast

Did you know that it takes the Earth 365-ish days to orbit the sun?

Artist illustration the Sun almost impacted by a wave of signals.

October 12, 2023

The Game That Went Dark: When Sports and Science Collide

Story

On September 18, 1941, the Brooklyn Dodgers were in Pittsburgh to play a game against the Pirates. In the fourth inning, with the score tied 0-0, announcer Red Barber’s radio broadcast was disrupted, and listeners suffered 15 minutes of silence. When the broadcast resumed, the Pirates had scored four runs.

Venus - November 11, 2010

August 01, 2023

How Did We Discover the Planets?

Story

When you look up you can see the stars, the Moon, and sometimes even other planets! We know what these otherworldly objects are because of centuries of research carried out by curious stargazers before us.