[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 120 (Monday, July 17, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4021-S4022]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING NASA'S LANGLEY RESEARCH CENTER
Mr. KAINE. Mr. President, on behalf of myself and the senior Senator
from Virginia, Mark Warner, we want to commemorate an important, early
step in our Nation's emergence as a world leader in flight, space
exploration, and atmospheric science.
One hundred years ago today on July 17, 1917, NASA's Langley Research
Center was founded in Hampton, VA. What was once a quiet expanse of
farmland and marsh on a riverbank near the Chesapeake Bay has helped
transform our Nation's transportation system and the world's
understanding of our universe.
That date in 1917 represents the beginning of a journey that would
eventually take Americans to the moon and American technology to Mars
and beyond.
Born in the days of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics,
the precursor to NASA, Langley was the agency's first field center and
our Nation's first civilian aeronautics laboratory.
The groundbreaking and sky conquering research conducted during
Langley's early days led to major advances in aeronautics and, in the
years after World War I, helped our Nation cement its status as a
pacesetter in flight research. Langley's important work also served as
a foundation for America's burgeoning aviation industry.
Langley won the first of its seven Collier trophies, awarded for the
highest achievements in aeronautics or astronautics in our Nation, in
1929. That trophy, won for development of cowling for radial air-cooled
engines, honored a high level of technical excellence that Langley has
maintained ever since.
Over the decades, Langley has evolved into a research center
supporting all of NASA's areas of emphasis, from human space
exploration to Earth science and from aeronautics to technology
development.
NASA Langley's legacy of discovery and innovation is truly
remarkable. Researchers at the center helped refine technologies and
designs across all flight regimes--subsonic, transonic, supersonic, and
hypersonic--revolutionizing the shape and performance of today's
aircraft and spacecraft.
This year, we all witnessed some of NASA Langley's contributions to
the space race through the lens of the Oscar-nominated film, ``Hidden
Figures.'' The film told the story of the many contributions of NASA
Langley employees, especially African-American women, to the Mercury 7
mission involving America's first astronauts.
Beyond that, Neil Armstrong and other Apollo astronauts learned how
to land on the moon by training at
[[Page S4022]]
Langley's Lunar Landing Research Facility, now known as the Landing and
Impact Research Facility.
Langley led the first successful robotic landing on Mars with the
Viking 1 mission, which gave humanity its first glimpse of the
landscape of another world. The center's technical expertise in a field
called Entry, Descent and Landing--the study of how a spacecraft can
safely move through a planet's atmosphere and reach the surface--has
been a key to every fully successful robotic landing on the surface of
Mars.
Those are just a few highlights among many, many accomplishments.
Over the decades, NASA Langley has contributed technologies that have
improved people's lives around the globe.
For example, the grooved pavement that makes our highways safer
evolved from research into runway surfaces at Langley. The winglets--
the upturned tips of wings seen on commercial aircraft--have saved fuel
and reduced pollution for years. Their use is a result of research done
by Richard Whitcomb, one of Langley's legendary aerodynamics experts.
Based on what we have seen when visiting the center, we predict this
legacy of excellence and innovation will continue--even accelerate--
over the next 100 years.
We have been proud to work closely with the center on improving the
safe use of unmanned aerial vehicles, better known as drones.
We have also proudly partnered with the center's efforts on
groundbreaking materials research, including the Advanced Composites
Initiative, to work toward developing lighter, safer, and more fuel-
efficient vehicles for air and space.
We have seen Langley's critical involvement in development of the
Orion crew module, which was tested at Langley's Landing and Impact
Research Facility to ensure that astronauts can safely splashdown in
the ocean after future missions.
Langley's test facilities are being used by companies who have
partnered with NASA through its Commercial Crew Program. By working
with Boeing and Space X, Langley is helping to boost our Nation's
growing space industry.
Other current projects include new aircraft designs intended to
change the sonic boom to a sonic thud, opening the way for a
revolutionary new generation of faster aircraft that will bring vast
improvements for the traveling public.
When it comes to serving the public's interest, Langley's work
studying the Earth's atmosphere and how it absorbs and radiates heat
tops the list. It is critical that NASA's work in earth science
research continues. Wise policy decisions rely on high-quality data.
Without solid data, we are essentially flying blind in the area of
environmental policy.
Coincidentally, the Hampton Roads area of Virginia--where Langley is
located--is second only to New Orleans in susceptibility to sea-level
rise. NASA Langley is one of many national assets--including military,
industrial, and academic institutions--located there. It is an
important region of our Nation and Langley's work to study earth's
atmosphere will safeguard Hampton Roads, as well as our planet as a
whole.
When you consider exciting new capabilities offered by the center's
Measurement Systems Laboratory, now under construction, and its
Katherine G. Johnson Computational Research Facility, which is set to
open later this year, it is clear that we can expect to see more
improvements and discoveries from NASA Langley.
As Virginia's Senators, we take great pride in the fact that NASA's
original field lab--sometimes called the agency ``Mother Center''--
resides in the great Commonwealth of Virginia. We firmly believe that
the boundary-pushing spirit displayed over the last 100 years
represents some of the best traits of our national character:
innovation, exploration, hard work, and the quest to make life better
for us all.
We look forward to seeing more amazing innovations from Langley and
NASA as our Nation continues its push to solve the great problems of
our age and as we extend humanity's reach ever deeper into the
universe.
NASA Langley is a remarkable place--and has been for 100 years. As a
center for aerospace innovation, technological discovery, and
scientific inquiry, Langley continues to lead the way.
We should all cheer them on as they pass this big milestone and
rocket ahead into a bold, new century.
____________________