Episodes Tagged with "George Low"
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 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
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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 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 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 September 17, 2015
3-Astronauts Grissom, Chaffee, and White check the communications headgear in preparation for what was to have been the first manned Apollo flight – Apollo-Saturn 204, scheduled for 21 February 1967
2-CM-012 – Apollo One- arrives at Kennedy Space Center, 26 August 1966
1-Command module 012 and service module 012 in workstands at the North American Aviation plant, Downey, in 1965
Posted on October 1, 2015
Chaffee, White, and Grissom
apollo1-sketch-jg
the-Apollo-1-launch-pad-fire-that-killed-astronauts-Gus-Grissom-Roger-Chaffee-and-Ed-White-celebrities-who-died-young-31704639-1372-740
Posted on October 8, 2015
3-Apollo_1_patch
2-apollo1chaffee
1-Chaffee at the consoles in Mission Control during the Gemini 3 mission
Posted on October 15, 2015
1-1024px-AS-204_-_hatch
3-PrimeandBackupCrews
2-PrimeCrewAltitudeChamberTest
Posted on October 22, 2015
3-apollo
2-c216a
1-Apollo_1’s_Command_Module_-_GPN-2003-00057
Posted on October 29, 2015
CM parts were studied and catalogued in the Pyrotechnics Installation Building at Kennedy Space Center.
The CM wiring harness goes through x-ray inspection.
apollo-1-disassembly
Posted on November 5, 2015
Deputy Administrator Seamans, Administrator Webb, Manned Space Flight Administrator George E. Mueller, and Apollo Program Director Phillips testify before a Senate hearing on the Apollo accident
2-Apollo1Langley
1-Apollo1 Inve
Posted on November 12, 2015
LC34_memorial_benches
LC34plaque2 (1)
KSC_Launch_Complex_34
Apollo1plaque
Apollo_1_Silver-Colored_Fliteline_Medallion_(Flown_on_Apollo_9)
Posted on May 12, 2016
OwenMaynardStepstotheMoon
chief of the LEM engineering office in the Apollo Program Office in Houston, TexasJPG
3-GeorgeLow
Posted on May 19, 2016
IMG_0988
3-GEMueller
1-Samuel_C._Phillips
Posted on June 8, 2016
3-Aerial_view_of_the_Apollo_8_Saturn-V
2-CrewGoingtoPad
1-Lunar-Moon-mission-profile
Posted on June 15, 2016
3-A8CTT
2-Apollo Command Module Main Cp
1-launchCresent
Posted on June 22, 2016
3-apollo-8-earth-orbit
2-Apollo8 Staging
1-Apollo 8 Lunar Plan
Posted on July 6, 2016
3-Apollo-8-patch
2-TLC view
1-LeavingSIVB
Posted on July 13, 2016
3-Earthrise
Far Side Of The Moon
1-The_Lunar_Farside_-_GPN-2000-001127
Posted on July 20, 2016
1o
3-A8
2-A8ChristmasEve
Posted on September 14, 2016
lm3-sigs
3
2-mcdivitt-and-schweickart-left-to-right-practice-in-the-lunar-module-simulator-for-the-apollo-9-mission-to-evaluate-the-lm-in-earth-orbit-operations-and-the-apollo-suit-in-the-space-environment
1-spacecraft-docking-devices-the-command-module-probe-and-docking-ring-at-right-the-lunar-module-drogue-at-left
Posted on November 16, 2016
1-apollo-10-logo
3b
2
Posted on November 23, 2016
a10-crew
3-ap10-crew-inspect-emergency-slide
1-cernanstafford-training-lm
Posted on December 7, 2016
3-john-young-suit-up
2-ap10-john-young-looking-at-flight-plan
1-youngtrainingcm
Posted on December 21, 2016
3-launch-a10
2-launch-of-apollo-10
1-crew-of-apollo-10-spaceflight-insider
Posted on January 11, 2017
3-Preparing for First docking
2-Earth from A10
1-Screen Shot 2017-01-08 at 2.37.16 PM
Posted on February 15, 2017
3CSM and LM pre-jettison attitude
2-insertion-cdh
1-A10-redocking
Posted on June 7, 2017
‘s weight was used by nearly all the astronaut corps
‘s modular equipment stowage assembly (MESA) hatch
1-Aldrin, lunar module pilot for Apollo 11, sets up a solar wind experiment during a practice session.
Posted on June 28, 2023
P3-Al Bean
Posted on August 16, 2024
1-p102
3-p108b
2-p108a
Posted on August 30, 2024
3-left to right,Johnson,Hardy,Krimer,Frutkin, and Gilruth
2-Soyuz
1-ringandcone
Posted on September 14, 2024
P-1Academician Aleksandr Pavlovich Vinogradov, left, examines a lunar rock collected on the Apollo 12 mission
P-3 Academician Keldysh below headed the delegations and signed the agreements Soviet Academy of Sciences photos)
P-2 At the Presidium of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, the Soviet and American negotiators face one another at the conference table in January 1971
Posted on September 28, 2024
3-Apollo Salyut
2-Soyuz Skylab
1-Apollo-Soyuz-Astronomy
Posted on October 11, 2024
1-Apollo-Salyut Hardware
2-Compatable Rendezvous Systems
3-Preliminary DM
Posted on October 25, 2024
2-Docking
Screenshot
1-Docking
Posted on November 8, 2024
3-Vladimir Kotelnikov
2-Konstantin Bushuyev
1-alexey-petrov-1
Posted on November 22, 2024
P2-Soviet two-fifths-scale model of their version of the ASTP docking system
P1- Nixon Kosygin summit
P3-Apollo communications links
Posted on December 6, 2024
P1-star-city-russia
P2-Cosmonaut-Training-Center-Star-City-Aerial-View
P3-MCC-Kaliningrad
Posted on December 20, 2024
P1-ac
P3-Rest stop during trip from Star City to Moscow provides crewmen with a chance for a snowball fight November 1973
P2- ASTPmockat 73Paris
Posted on January 10, 2025
P2-Spacecraft Simulators at Star City
P1-Interior view of environmental control system
P3-Docking systems installed on a simulator
Posted on January 24, 2025
P1-soyuz16Crew
ÓÒÏÓ̇‚Ú ÕËÍÓÎ‡È –Û͇‚˯ÌËÍÓ‚
P2-Anatoli Filipchenko
Posted on March 7, 2025
2-Rollout
3-Rollout
1-Inside the high bay of the Vehicle Assembly Building at the Kennedy Space Center, work progresses on the replacement of the first-stage fins of ASTP’s Saturn IB launch vehicle, March 1975
Posted on March 28, 2025
P3-ASTP
p1-LeonovKubasov
P2-Soyuz launch
Posted on April 11, 2025
P3-AI Generated Image of Apollo Soyuz docke
P2-Improperly installed connector on the docking latch
P1-separated from the s-ivb
Posted on April 25, 2025
P2-friendship
P3-handshake
P1-Apollo-Soyuz-handshake
Posted on June 6, 2025
P3-crewmembers pose with the Apollo Command Module from their mission
P2-President Ford at the White House during the tour of the United States
P1-Stafford, Leonov, Brand, Kubasov, and Slayton in Moscow during the tour of the Soviet Union
Posted on April 24, 2014
James_McDivitt_-_Gemini_4
Gemini 4
Gemini 4 Astronauts
Ed White
Gemini 4 astronauts
Posted on May 1, 2014
Spacewalk
Manned Maneuvering Unit
Gt4Patch
gemini-4
gemini-4_landing
Gemini_4_Outside_National_Air_and_Space_Museum
Gemini 4 recovery
Gemini 4 launch
Gemini 4 inside national air and space
Gemini -24 scale model
Ed white
G4 button
