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NASA Glenn Research Center Turns 75 With Public Open Houses

A tire developed to travel on Mars
KABIR BHATIA
/
WKSU
A tire developed to travel on Mars
A tire developed to travel on Mars
Credit KABIR BHATIA / WKSU
/
WKSU
A tire developed to travel on Mars

  NASA Glenn Research Centerin Cleveland turns 75 this year, and it’s been celebrating by opening its doors to the public.

  The facility near Cleveland Hopkins Airport welcomed about 20,000 visitors over the weekend to see everything from a zero-gravity drop-tower to the latest in moon buggy tires made of piano wire.AnkhurChokshi, a recent Cleveland State engineering grad, was intrigued by the possibility of tires made of metal or springs wrapped in rubber for use here on Earth.

“Why not, right? If ...  [it] can run on Mars or [the] Moon, why not here [in] good conditions" here?

The “spring tire,” as it’s called, was one of several pieces on display that would help NASA put humans on Mars in the next 20 years.

The weekend open house was NASA Glenn’s first since 2008. Spokeswoman Jan Wittry says next month, NASA will have an open house at Plum Brook Station in Sandusky, which will showcase spacecraft testing.

“We have the world’s largest vacuum chamber there. And we have the most powerful mechanical vibration table for shaking a spacecraft to simulate the vibrations that they experience when they’re launched. And then we also have the most powerful acoustic chamber. And so all in that one place, we can subject a spacecraft to the vibration, the intense sounds, the intense heat and cool of a journey into space.”

Copyright 2021 WKSU. To see more, visit WKSU.

Kabir Bhatia joined WKSU as a Reporter/Producer and weekend host in 2010. A graduate of Hudson High School, he received his Bachelor's from Kent State University. While a Kent student, Bhatia served as a WKSU student assistant, working in the newsroom and for production.