Posted on February 6, 2014
On January 3 1962, “Gemini” became the official designation of the Mercury Mark II program. The name had been suggested by Alex Nagy of NASA Headquarters because the twin stars Castor and Pollux in constellation Gemini (the Twins) seemed to him to symbolize the program’s two-man crew, its rendezvous mission, and its relation to Mercury. Coincidentally, the astronomical symbol (II) for Gemini, the third constellation of the zodiac, corresponded neatly to the Mark II designation…
The general arrangement of liquid rocket systems (OAMS and RCS) in the Gemini spacecraft
Gemini landing gear part of the land landing system along with the paraglider
fig41The B. F. Goodrich partial-wear full-pressure suit being developed for the Gemini program
fig33Figure 33. The emergency parachute recovery system for the half-scale paraglider flight test vehicle for Phase II-A of the development program – Copy
fig27Gemini spacecraft nomenclature – Copy
Agena B
