Episodes Tagged with "Apollo"
Posted on July 18, 2018
Posted on September 13, 2017
Posted on December 15, 2016
Posted on December 16, 2016
Posted on February 12, 2015
Using a model at upper left, William Rector of General Dynamics Corp. describes the design his company proposed for the Apollo lunar mission
Spacecraft modules in this drawing were identified in the Space Task Group’s request for proposals from contractors for developing and producing the command module
Saturn 1 test
Saturn 1 test 2
mySuperLamePic_c1194b7fa9498eb5af694d8530d3ebf8
At lower left, E. E. Clark and Carlos de Moraes of the Martin Company display three of a dozen command module configurations considered before the choice of the one to the right
ASA’s second Administrator, James E. Webb (at center above), and George M. Low (right above) of NASA Headquarters receive a model of General Electric’s proposed vehicle
Posted on February 19, 2015
David G. Hoag, technical design director at the laboratory, examines the inertial measuring unit that would measure changes in Apollo spacecraft velocity when propulsion systems were fired
MIT Instrumentation Laboratory Director C. Stark Draper inspects a mockup of the Apollo guidance and control system in the September 1963
astronaut positions
Posted on February 26, 2015
John_Houbolt_and_LOR2
Earth Orbit Rendezvous
Apollo_Direct_Ascent
Posted on March 5, 2015
12-Second stage (S-IV)
11-Booster stage (S-I)
10-Proposed C-2
9-C-1 and earlier vehicles
8-Model of blockhouse at Launch Complex 34
7-Vehicles using Titan and Atlas stages
6-Saturn C
5-Saturn B
4-Preliminary concept of Launch Complex 34, Cape Canaveral
3-Early H-1 Engine
2-Thor-Jupiter engine
1-Proposed configuration of a clustered booster
Posted on March 12, 2015
Lifting the first stage from the transporter
Hoisting the stage in vertical attitude
Erecting the upper stages
Early design concepts of C-1 and C-5 versions of the Saturn launch vehicles
16-Unloading Compromise in Florida
15-S-I and S-IV stages aboard the Compromise
14-Booster movement around Wheeler Dam
11-Launch Complex 34
10-Configurations of Saturn flight vehicles
9-Saturn Barge route
7-Six-engine configuration of the S-IV stage
6-Redesigned tail of the Saturn booster
5- The barge Palaemon
3-First horizontal mating of the Saturn vehicle
2-Movement of dummy S-IV stage to checkout
Posted on March 18, 2015
To assemble the large Saturns, NASA needed a plant, preferably one already built. The Michoud facility (above), close to New Orleans, suited the requirements
Saturn_SA1_on_launch_pad
Modules of the Apollo spacecraft were tested in Florida in the Manned Spacecraft Operations Building. Above, NASA officials Walt Williams, Merritt Preston, Kurt Debus, Brainerd Holmes, and Wernher von Braun
Maiden launch of the Apollo program- Saturn SA-1 from Cape Canaveral, 27 October 1961
First Saturn Launch
Liftoff of Saturn I. Note the long cable mast falling away on the right
mySuperLamePic_c001b3d7f61bec278243523bf2e79253
Abe Silverstein, NASA’s Director of Space Flight Development, is shown touring a rocket engine facility
1-Launch Complex 34, blockhouse interior
Posted on March 26, 2015
two landing techniques proposed for the direct ascent mode
SA-1
RendezvousMethods
proposed lunar-surface-rendezvous procedure, a propellant-transfer vehicle takes fuel from the tanker to a manned space vehicle. After loading the fuel, the two astronauts would fire the engine of their spacecraft to return to the earth
Major configuration changes in the Apollo spacecraft from May 1960 to July 1962
Early design concepts of C-1 and C-5 versions of the Saturn launch vehicles
A ferry that would leave a command ship in orbit around the moon, visit the lunar surface, and then return to the command ship for the voyage back to the earth
Posted on April 2, 2015
Early design concepts of C-1 and C-5 versions of the Saturn launch vehicles
NASA announced selection of the lunar-orbit-rendezvous landing technique at an 11 July 1962 press conference. left to right James E. Webb, Robert C. Seamans, Jr., D. Brainerd Holmes, and Joseph F. Shea
Harry C. Shoaf (Space Task Group Engineering Division 15 November 1961 of a proposed lunar lander to be used with an advanced version of the Mercury spacecraft
concept of a small lunar lander during descent to the surface of the moon, as proposed by Langley Research Center employees in October 1961
Posted on April 9, 2015
Shea uses models to demonstrate how the lunar module would dock with the command module
Rocket Comparison
Lunar orbit insertion
Posted on April 16, 2015
REF: 2-903-6 SA-2 LAUNCH AT CAPE. IGNITION OF ROCKET (SATURN 1 VEHICLE)
SA-2 erected on launch pedestal
Wernher_von_Braun_confers_with_Brainerd_Holmes_and_Nicholas_Golovin
Posted on April 23, 2015
The impact facility at North American was used to drop-test the CM
Selection of Little Joe II completed the Apollo family of launch vehicles.
Scott Carpenter, John Glenn, and Walter Schirra in 1963 inspect a full-scale mock up of the Apollo CM
North American Aviation Stormy,
Interior of a partial full-scale mockup of the Apollo command module
major parts of the command module structure
Posted on April 30, 2015
Posted on May 7, 2015
General Electric employees monitor activities of a spacecraft test in the automatic-checkout-equipment spacecraft control room in 1965
comparison of spacecraft and launch vehicle configuration
Apollo tracking network in 1966. Radar stations with large antennas for continuous tracking and communications were at Goldstone, California; Madrid, Spain; and Canberra, Australia
Posted on May 14, 2015
Full-scale model of the command module, above- the strake aerodynamic devices may be seen at either side of the spacecraft just above the aft heatshield
Removing LM from S=IVB stage
On 16 November 1963 in Cape Canaveral’s Blockhouse 37, NASA’s new manned space flight chief George Mueller
Communications with the moon as the earth turned. Astronauts on the moon’s surface also could talk to one another
Posted on May 21, 2015
download
The cabin section (or primary structure) of the CM is assembled at North American in 1965
The CM probe would slip into the LM’s dish-shaped drogue, and 12 latches on the docking ring would engage, to lock the spacecraft together, airtight
Full-scale model of the service module, resting on a mockup of a spacecraft-lunar module adapter, with panels off to reveal part of the internal arrangement
Jettison of the launch escape system (right) after successful launch, also pulls away the boost protective cover that protects the windows from flame and soot
On the drawing of the launch escape system at upper right, the canard aerodynamic devices are near the top of the escape tower
Posted on May 28, 2015
VonBraunMuellerReesSA6
SA5_launch
sa-6-spacecraft
sa-6-dem
SA-6 spacecraft and launch vehicle ready to go
SA-6 on pad
SA-5Section cuts
SA-5
SA-5 S-IV stage
SA-5 on pad
SA-5 Demensions
apollo_sa7_launch
apollo_sa4
Posted on June 4, 2015
a-002
A-001_launch_1964_05_13
Pad_abort_test_1-237×300
Little Joe II- On Pad, Complex 36 (December 7, 1964)
BP12
Apollo_LJ_II_flight_profile
a-001 bp-12
A pad abort test at White Sands, left, helped determine that the launch escape system could propel the Apollo command module away from danger if a Saturn launch vehicle explosion should threaten
A desert area at White Sands Test Facility, New Mexico, was used for testing the spacecraft propulsion system module
Posted on June 11, 2015
6-NASA engineers in 1964 decided that astronauts could stand in the lunar module cabin during the trip to the lunar surface. Note triangular windows
7-Proposed sleeping positions for astronauts on the moon
5-Mockup of lunar module cabin with seats
4-The drawing of the stage indicates positions of components
3-underside of the lunar module descent stage shows fuel tank installation
2-Administrator James Webb examines models of the lunar and command modules in docked position
1-Lunar module generations from 1962 (above left; the vehicle originally proposed by Grumman) to 1969
Posted on June 17, 2015
3-improved lunar module features – ladder, porch, hatch, and rendezvous window
2-he addition of a ladder on a landing gear leg made the task much easier
1- Astronauts found a knotted rope from the lunar module difficult to climb down (or up)
Posted on July 2, 2015
5-Removing the LEM
4-ApolloSpacecraftLMAdapterDiagram
3-Apollo_Spacecraft_diagram
2-Tm-1 mockup of the Lunar Module
1-lm-6-rendezvous-radar-antenna-assy-sm
Posted on July 9, 2015
4-SIV-SIVB
3-Saturn 1b-V
2-Cutaways
1- SIV_rocket_stage
Posted on July 16, 2015
4- Saturn_SA10_launch
Saturn_SA8_launch
2- The SA-9
8- Pegasus_Deployment_sequence
7- Cutaway views show the interior of the command module (for clarity, the center couch is not shown)
6- Pegasus Deployed
5- Pegasus Stowed
4- Saturn_SA10_launch
Posted on July 23, 2015
3- 1230_Lunar_module_LTA-2_R
2-Disher_John_
1-Lunar_Module_diagram
Posted on July 30, 2015
2-NASA_Group_1_and_2_Astronauts_Photo_With_Autopens
2-Back row- See, McDivitt, Lovell, White, & Stafford. Front row- Conrad, Borman, Armstrong, & Young
1- Project_Mercury_AstronautsBack row- Shepard, Grissom, Cooper; front row- Schirra, Slayton, Glenn, Carpenter.
Posted on August 5, 2015
Group4Astronaut
4-Group 4 L-R- Garriott, Gibson. Front row, L-R- Michel, Schmitt, Kerwin.
3-Astronaut_Group_Three_-_GPN-2000-001476
Posted on August 13, 2015
5-Back row, from L-R- Swigert, Pogue, Evans, Weitz, Irwin, Carr, Roosa, Worden, Mattingly, Lousma. Front row, from L-R- Givens, Mitchell, Duke, Lind, Haise, Engle, Brand, Bull, McCandless
Posted on August 20, 2015
AS-203_launch
AS-202_launch
AS-201_launch
Apollo-Saturn 201 mission – launch, recovery
Posted on August 27, 2015
3-Christopher_Kraft,_flight_director_during_Project_Mercury,_works_at_his_console_inside_the_Flight_Control_area_at_Mercury_Mission_Control
2-Wally Schirra (right) consults the flight plan for his Mercury-Atlas-8 (MA-8) mission with Flight Director Chris Kraft
1-Chris Kraft and Rober Gilruth
Posted on September 3, 2015
3-Robert F. Thompson (center) and Christopher C. Kraft Jr. (right) brief Rear Admiral W.C. Abhau
2-Kraft with his new flight directors before the Gemini 4 mission Clockwise from lower right Kraft, Gene Kranz, Glynn Lunney and John Hodge
1-Kraft Kranz Gemini Fuel Cell problem
Posted on September 10, 2015
3-Kranz and his teacher Kraft
2-Kranz at his console on May 30, 1965, in the Mission Operations Control Room, Mission Control Center, Houston
1-Kranz-F86 Sabre Cat
Posted on January 14, 2016
8-wresat
7-Wresat
6-Wresat
5-Lunar Orbiter 5 photo of the entire Tycho impact crater in the southern highlands
4-LO 4 Davy crater chain chain stretches from Davy Y at left to the large bright Davy G diameter 15 km Note the even spacing of the craters
3Lunar Orbiter 3 Image 3121_M – Tsiolkovskiy Crater center
2-Lunar Orbiter 2 on November 20, 1966, 29 miles (47 km) above the lunar surface, over the Sea of Tranquility
1-Lunar Orbiter 3 spacecraft
Posted on January 21, 2016
6-Astronauts Pay a Visit to Surveyor 3
5-Photomosaic of a panorama taken by Surveyor 7 of its landing site
4-Surveyor 6 on the Plains of Sinus Medii
3-Wide-angle picture of the northwest wall of the Surveyor 5 crater
2-Surveyor_4_launch
1-Photograph of the Surveyor 3 spacecraft resting on the surface of the Moon, taken by Apollo 12 astronauts
Posted on June 13, 2013
Cent
gustraining
GPN
Centrifuge
Scott
472046main_GPN-2000-000596-4x3_946-710
gustraining
Posted on August 22, 2013
mime-attachment2
1658
413px-John_F._Kennedy_speaks_at_Rice_University
Posted on August 29, 2013
Liberty_Bell_7_The_Kansas_Cosmosphere_and_Space_Center
513px-Grissom_lifted_from_water_61-MR4-82
Mercury_4_Hatch
1137px-Grissom_prepares_to_enter_Liberty_Bell_7_61-MR4-76
GusSuitup
460px-Mercury-Redstone_4_Launch_MSFC-6414824
Posted on June 12, 2019
P9-Alan-Shepard-Stamp
P7-Shepard, Alan
P9-Alan-Shepard-Stamp
P8-Shepard’s memorial stone in Derry, New Hampshire; his ashes were scattered at sea
P7-Shepard in 1995
P5-Alan_Shepard_during_training_for_the_Apollo_14_mission
Posted on September 26, 2013
mercury-flight-27[3]
mercury-flight-26[3]
mercury-flight-25[3]
mercury-flight-24[3]
mercury-flight-24[3] (1)
Ma6Smith
MA6-dye released
MA6 on tv
Posted on October 3, 2013
640_goonhilly
640_telstar-engineers
Telstar1
space rocket history pic22
Ariel-1
Thor_Delta_with_Ariel_1_(Apr._26,_1962)
Ranger4
Ranger4JPL
Ranger-4-Atlas-Agena-B
Posted on March 25, 2020
P3-Revised2CosSoyuz-1
P6-A15FlightJour
P5-A15SuitSchd
P4-A8PressKit
P2-Valve1SimplifiedDepiction
P1-Valve-2
P3-Revised2CosSoyuz
P2-Valve-2
P1-Valve1SimplifiedDepiction
Posted on April 8, 2020
P2-apollo-15-sound-on-moon-2
P3-al-nasa
P1-Map
Posted on April 22, 2020
P1-Jim_Irwin
P3-DaveNeilG8
P2-james-irwin-apollo-15
Posted on May 6, 2020
P2-ScottMoon
P1-Dave_Scott_Apollo_15_CDR
P3-Apollo_15_Flown_Cover
Posted on May 20, 2020
P2-A15-Ignition
P3-Layout-of-launch-vehicle-indicator-lamps
P1-vehicle-well-into-its-vertical-flight
P3-A15-liftoff
P1-Dave-Scott
Posted on June 3, 2020
P1- vehicle well into its vertical flight
P2-Graph of g-forces during the Saturn V’s ascent into Earth orbit
Posted on June 17, 2020
P3-Frame-from-TV-transmission-showing-shattered-glass-pane-on-tapemeter
P2-DeltaVThrust-Switch
P1-transPositioning
Posted on July 1, 2020
P3-A15-leaning
P2-A15-landing-site
P1-A15-landing
Posted on July 15, 2020
P3-Pana15pan1065345
P2-40_a15SEVA
P1-a15.names_
Space Rocket History #344 – Apollo 15 – Oxygen Leak, Glass Ball, First Steps & The Lunar Rover
Posted on July 29, 2020
p3-Image-of-LRV_main_components
P2-Apollo-15-green-glass-clod-15426-This-sample-has-a-mass-of-224-grams-The-clods-as-a-whole-are-several-centimeters-in-size
P1-IrwinNearFall
Space Rocket History #35 – Textbook Spaceflight – Mercury-Atlas 8, Sigmac 7 with Wally Schirra
Posted on October 24, 2013
Recovery_of_Sigma_7_spcae_capsule_by_USS_Kearsarge_October_1962
MA-8_landing_under_parachute
MA-8_liftoff
163085main_sigma7-sm
760px-Mercury_Astronaut_Wally_Schirra_-_GPN-2000-001351
479px-Mercury_8_in_Hanger_-_GPN-2000-001441
018
163085main_sigma7-sm
Posted on November 7, 2013
space rocket history pic36
S63-07856
Mercury9_tibet
Gordon_Cooper_Jr._-_cropped
773px-Mercury_On_Deck_-_GPN-2000-001403
479px-Cooper_-_GPN-2000-000997
Posted on December 19, 2013
space rocket history pic46
Esro-logo
nimbus_meteorological_satellite
64-041A
220px-NASA_FACTS_Volume_2_number_6_PROJECT_RANGER_image_04
610px-Ranger7_PIA02975
Posted on January 23, 2014
fig6 (1)McDonnell-proposed two-man Mercury spacecraft. Shown is the interior arrangement of spacecraft equipment
fig4
fig3
Posted on January 30, 2014
The operating principle of the fuel cell designed by General Electric, adopted for use in the Gemini spacecraft
modified Titan II booster
Gemini spacecraft to be released publicly
Adapter Section of Mark II
Four stages in a rendezvous mission as conceived early in 1962
An artist’s version of the use of ejection seats to escape from the Gemini spacecraft
fig8 proposed lunar lander to be used with an advanced version of the Mercury spacecraft
Posted on February 6, 2014
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
Posted on February 27, 2014
Tang
space rocket history pic69
Gemini1-1
Gemini Launch
Gemini 1 Left Instrument Pallet
Gemini 1 Experiment Pallets
Posted on July 17, 2014
gemini_atv_8
Gemini Augmented Target Docking Adapter during pre-flight checkout
gemagena
agenhgre
800px-S66-25781_PR
facebook hint
Posted on July 24, 2014
Niel and David
Neil_Armstrong_in_Gemini_G-2C_training_suit
neil_armstrong_david_scott
Neil_Armstrong_1956_portrait
gemini8 at air and space museum Wapkoneta ohio
Gemini-VIII-flight-crew-SCOTT-David-R.-and-ARMSTRONG-Neil-A.
GEMINI-TITAN-8_-_PRELAUNCH_ACTIVITY
gemini_atv_8
gemini_8
Gemini 8 water egress test
F9F-2_Panthers_VF-51_over_Korea_1951 with Armstrong piloting
David Scott
Gemini-VIII-flight-crew-SCOTT-David-R.-and-ARMSTRONG-Neil-A.
Posted on July 30, 2014
gatv_diagram_labelled
Agena view from G8
640px-Gemini_8_during_rescue
Gemini_8_launch
Gemini_8_docking with agena
Gemini_8_Atlas-Agena_launch
Posted on August 7, 2014
G8 Ohio A&
gemini8 at air and space museum Wapkoneta ohio
G8
Posted on August 14, 2014
First_View_of_Earth_from_Moon
lunar_orbiter1
Surveyor_1_shadow_lunarsurface
Surveyor_1_Foot_Pad on the moon
Surveyor_1_launch with Atlas Centar
surveyor 1 mockup_beach
luna10
Posted on August 28, 2014
Gemini_9Acrew
g9patch
AtlasAgenaG9a
Posted on August 21, 2014
Elliot_See
gemini9
Charles_Bassett
Elliot_McKay_See
Posted on September 4, 2014
AugmentTargetDockingAdapter
tom Stafford in orbit
hint for facebook
Posted on September 11, 2014
Gemini 9 splashes down at 9-00 A.M., June 6, 1966. The day of the EVA was also their last in space
gemini9_crew_a
Gem9down-S66-34118
eugene_cernan
cernan_gt9_eva
Posted on September 18, 2014
KSC-66P-0323
KSC-66P-0317
gemini-10-astronaunt-michael-collins-pilot-for-nasa
Gemini 9 astronauts Gene Cernan and Tom Stafford brief Gemini 10 astronauts John Young and Mike Collins. And….how about that nice ATDA model in full gator
640px-Gemini10crew
Space Rocket History #81 – Gemini X with John Young and Mike Collins – Part 2 – Riding the Agena
Posted on September 25, 2014
John Young in Gemini 10
Gemini_10_launch_time_exposure_-_GPN-2006-000036
Gemini 10 Agena
Ge10Patch_orig
Collins shortly after launch
Agena_Firing_-_GPN-2000-001355
Posted on October 2, 2014
gemini-10_recovery
gemini_11_splashdown_recovery_print-r5a59c8d7c6244f54af0dc3eba26b9a72_wa3_8byvr_512
G10RecoveryCertificate
DaveG10
Posted on October 9, 2014
scan0704
RichardFGordon
320px-Gemini_11_patch
agena 11
Gemini_11_prime_crew_(Gordon_and_Conrad)
Gemini_11_Gordon_suits_up for G11
Posted on October 16, 2014
Gordon Astride Agena
agena 11
1024px-Gemini_Profiles
Posted on October 23, 2014
Recovery of G11
mySuperLamePic_4b6522ec730b0c0a85b7ed20f7c4f00f
G11 parachute
Agena Tether Experiment
Posted on October 30, 2014
p3-AldrinLovell
p2-Aldrin Lovell Cernan Cooper
p-1G12Patch
gemini-12_2
Agena12
Posted on November 6, 2014
Agena12tether
buzzViewHatchOpen
Gemini_XII_Mission_Image_-_Solar_Eclipse
G12 tether
buzzadrinview
Posted on November 13, 2014
p-1G12Patch
LovelAldrinRecovery
Gemini12Into Sun
gemini_xii_mission
Posted on January 29, 2015
c012a
GilruthThompsonGlennan
c010
c002c
c002b
c002a
Posted on February 5, 2015
glenn-kennedy_300_241_s_c1
ST-69-4-63
Posted on April 20, 2016
