
Jonny Kim
@JonnyKimUSA • 77,991 subscribers
NASA astronaut. Sharing stories of education, camaraderie, and the inspiring humans behind our public service.
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My first time-lapse. Thanks to some instruction and tips from Nichole “Vapor” Ayers, I caught my first aurora. After seeing the result, I told her this felt like fishing. Prepping the camera, the angle, the settings, the mount, then setting your timer and coming back to hope you got a catch. And after catching my first fish, I think I’m hooked. Thanks, Vapor! Beautiful auroras passing over southeastern Asia and Australia.
Jonny Kim762,567 просмотров • 1 год назад

In advance of the NG-23 cygnus capture with the Canadarm, Houston gave our crew onboard an opportunity to practice moving the arm and capturing a simulated grapple fixture (i.e. target). This is a timelapse over 2 hours capturing Houston maneuvering the Canadarm for this practice.
Jonny Kim162,771 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

On Nov 13th, there was a solar particle event that resulted in beautiful blankets of aurora. You may have seen it. We had the most amazing view and our crew collectively took thousands of photos and dozens of time lapses. Here is one of those time lapses. Nov 13th. Nikon Z9 | 14mm.
Jonny Kim153,822 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

Southern lights. Nikon Z9 | 24mm | ISO 3200, f/1.4, 1/4s
Jonny Kim198,071 просмотров • 9 месяцев назад

In space, we’re weightless, but not massless. So how do we measure our mass? There are a few ways to do it, but they all come down to Newton’s Second Law: F = ma. Apply a known force, measure the resulting acceleration, and you can calculate mass from the relationship between the two.
Jonny Kim81,361 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

Caught a fish! Hope you enjoy this round of space fishing for beautiful auroras. If you’re wondering what the reflections in the lower left are, I made a rookie mistake of not having the shroud completely cover the window so you can see some crew activity (the cupola is located adjacent to one of our exercise devices).
Jonny Kim129,811 просмотров • 11 месяцев назад

There is a science lab onboard the International Space Station called the Life Sciences Glovebox. It’s one of the places we conduct biological and life science experiments in a controlled environment. It can control temperature, humidity, and even has a negative pressure environment so we can work with hazardous materials. Recent experiments in the LSG include a study to determine how bone cells can respond to various conditions in microgravity and determining if higher fidelity protein crystallization in space can yield more effective drugs. Here’s a short video describing what it is and how we deploy it.
Jonny Kim76,065 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

How do we translate large heavy objects in space? Carefully and with the slightest of inputs.
Jonny Kim96,462 просмотров • 9 месяцев назад

M+38: One of the experiments we’re conducting on the International Space Station is to expand on current hardware, demonstrating the creation of golden nanospheres under microgravity conditions, which are larger and more uniform than their Earth-bound versions, and have applications in cancer diagnostics and treatment and improved pharmaceuticals. We obtain our samples from the MELFI freezer and grow them into our Industrial Crystallization Cassettes, and will package them for return on Spx-32 for additional analysis.
Jonny Kim112,307 просмотров • 1 год назад

How do we clean in space? Similar to how we clean on Earth, but weightlessness has some extra challenges.
Jonny Kim94,785 просмотров • 11 месяцев назад

Nichole “Vapor” Ayers International Space Station NASA 大西卓哉 (JAXA宇宙飛行士)Takuya Onishi NPR Peggy Whitson Zena Cardman Col. Mike Fincke 油井 亀美也 Kimiya.Yui COL Anne McClain M+244: Spending 8 months in space on the International International Space Station has been one of the greatest privileges of my life. Thoughts from a departing space sailor.
Jonny Kim42,496 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

Exercise machines aboard the International International Space Station
Jonny Kim43,033 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

Earlier in this mission, Spx-33 did a checkout of its reboost capability. In preparation for that maneuver, the solar arrays on the International Space Station had to park in a safe position. Here’s a time lapse demonstrating the solar arrays autotracking the position of the sun then feathering to a safe position. Notice in this sped-up video how the solar arrays can rotate about two different axes, one controlled by the SARJ (solar alpha rotary joint) and the other by the BGA (beta gimbal assembly). This allows fine tuning the position of the arrays to optimize sunlight conversion to electricity.
Jonny Kim38,010 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад